Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Jameson Berkow
Publication Date: November 28, 2025 - 11:00
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Supreme Court rules investors can sue companies that fail to disclose ‘material changes’ fast enough
November 28, 2025
Canadian public companies will need to meet a higher standard of disclosure in response to a landmark decision from the country’s highest court.
The Supreme Court of Canada ruled Friday that an investor can sue a company if it does not immediately disclose changes in its operations.
The first person to get rich from the sweet products of maple trees was an American. George Clinton Cary was born in 1864 on a farm in Fort Fairfield, in eastern Maine, on the border of New Brunswick. As a boy of ten, Cary was already a budding farmer and had his own pair of steers. By age twenty-two, Cary was looking beyond the farming industry and became a travelling grocery salesman, moving goods by horse and buggy throughout Maine, Vermont, and New Hampshire.
The legend of Cary’s start in the maple business began in the spring of 1886. Cary’s wagon, pulled by a team of horses, got...
December 20, 2025 - 06:30 | Peter Kuitenbrouwer | Walrus
The RCMP says it is actively investigating Ryan Wedding’s alleged criminal activities, in the hopes of laying criminal charges in Canada against members of the organization. In the wake of charges in the U.S. against Canadians allegedly tied to the Wedding organization, two senior Mounties told The Globe and Mail that they are continuing to pursue their own probe.
December 20, 2025 - 06:30 | Colin Freeze | The Globe and Mail
Jack Frieberg’s parents were Holocaust survivors. Louis and Gerda Frieberg came to Toronto in the 1950s to start a new life in the New World. He worked as a carpenter, she as a seamstress, making 70 cents a dress in a Spadina Avenue sweatshop. As Toronto boomed in the postwar years, they saw an opportunity and started a construction company.
December 20, 2025 - 06:15 | Marcus Gee | The Globe and Mail

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