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Thursday, April 16, 2026

Dec. 7: Ralph Nader '55 on the Evolution of Whistleblowing - Princeton Alumni Weekly

Noah Arjomand ’10 co-directed a new “courageously intimate, brutally moving” documentary titled Eat Your Catfish, about his mother’s struggle with ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease. — Variety

New York City medical examiner Barbara Sampson ’88 is leaving her post to become vice chair of pathology at the Icahn School of Medicine. Her 23 years in the ME’s office included 9/11 and the COVID pandemic. — The New York Post

Denver Public Schools ombudsperson Sharon Bailey ’75 died last week and was remembered by the Board of Education for dedicating “her life to ensuring African American students, educators, and families were equipped with the tools they deserved for quality learning that reflected the voices and stories of the African American community.” — The Denver Channel

An appeals court in the Phillipines is allowing journalist Maria Ressa ’86 to travel to Norway to accept her Nobel Peace Prize. The government, which has charged her repeatedly as her digital publication investigates the president’s drug war, had called her a flight risk. — The New York Times

UC Berkeley School of Law professor Orin Kerr ’93 appeared on the Lawfare podcast to talk about Apple’s lawsuit against NSO Group over spyware and cybersecurity. — Lawfare

Actress Irene Sofia Lucio ’08 is performing in a production of Slave Play — about three interracial couples — which just re-opened on Broadway. — Broadway World

“But how are you going to control whistleblowing? By definition it is...



Read Full Story: https://paw.princeton.edu/article/dec-7-ralph-nader-55-evolution-whistleblowing