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Guests at the 2021 Commencement ceremony were greeted by several protesters representing the People for Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) on Thursday, May 27. The protesters gathered outside Homewood Field at 6:30 p.m. in opposition to research conducted by Professor Shreesh Mysore.
COURTESY OF LAURA WADSTEN
The initiative will pair behavioral health clinicians with trained campus security officers when responding to mental health crises.
Hopkins announced the creation of the Johns Hopkins University Behavioral Health Crisis Support Team (JHU BHCST) to respond to behavioral and mental health crises on and around Homewood Campus on May 18. In an email to constituents, University President Ronald J. Daniels, Acting Vice President for Public Safety Connor Scott and Vice Provost for Student Health and Well-Being Kevin Shollenberger promoted the initiative as part of the University’s commitment to reimagining public safety.
They noted that currently, campus safety and security officers are the first and sole in-person responders to behavioral health crises.
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Students call on the University to cancel its plans for the private police force as acts of police brutality continue nationwide.
The Office of Diversity and Inclusion hosted “Addressing Hate During COVID-19” on April 23 to discuss nationwide calls for racial justice. The event was sparked by the conviction of Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis police officer charged with the murder of George Floyd last summer, and followed the fatal shooting of Daunte Wright, a 20-year-old Black man, in Brooklyn Center, Minn., on April 11.
At the event, University President Ronald J. Daniels encouraged reflection and collective action within the Hopkins community.
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He helped win a case against a Tiger King regular. Now this Yale law grad says the Constitution protects owls.
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Asher Smith, right, and representatives of Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge, an accredited sanctuary based in Eureka Springs, Ark., rescue a female lion, Mauri, from Tim Stark’s Indiana facility, Wildlife in Need. Mauri was one of 25 big cats rescued in September 2020 as a result of court orders in Smith’s litigation against Stark.Contributed photo
Asher Smith is a Yale Law School graduate who helped secure the rescue of big cats from the “Tiger King” zoo and now he’s trying to use the U.S. Constitution to free 30 barn owls from a research lab.