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After Taylor Hendricks broke his leg, Utah Jazz live up to team motto: Show Love

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After Taylor Hendricks broke his leg, Utah Jazz live up to team motto: Show Love


SALT LAKE CITY — As a rookie last season, forward Taylor Hendricks didn’t pay much notice to the mantra repeated daily around the Utah Jazz.

Show Love.

The credo, preached by coach Will Hardy, is painted in white on the weight room walls at the team’s practice facility. It’s in block letters on a wall bordering the practice court. It blares colorfully in a cursive, neon sign in the entry to the facility. And when the team breaks its huddles after practices or in games, the players and coaches repeat in unison either “show love” or “together.”

Hendricks would say it, and he would see the signage, but as a wide-eyed 20-year-old, Show Love didn’t resonate that first year.

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“I didn’t really think too much about it at first,” Hendricks said.

But after a gruesome, season-ending leg injury on Oct. 28 in Dallas, the No. 9 pick in the 2023 NBA Draft has a different outlook on the mantra.

Facing a long recovery after surgery to repair a dislocated ankle and broken fibula in his right leg, Hendricks experienced something unique in professional sports.

At a time when many athletes can feel detached from the team, and a time when questioning their identity and their future is common, Hendricks says he felt the opposite after his injury. Never before had he felt more connected to his Jazz teammates. And never before had his purpose been more clear.

All because in his lowest moments, the Jazz showed him love.

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One teammate delivered a care package to his home. Another inquired about his surgery and recovery schedule to offer support and prayer. And when Hendricks first visited the team at practice after his surgery, Hardy had him diagram the first play for the next game. Throughout, players have been texting and calling Hendricks regularly, and when the team is on the road, Hardy calls back to Utah to check in with Hendricks on life topics outside of basketball.

“I see it now,” Hendricks said, referring to the mantra. “I understand it.”

Tied for the second-fewest wins in the NBA, Utah (5-18) is navigating the unforgiving rebuilding landscape in the wake of trading stars Donovan Mitchell and Rudy Gobert in separate offseason deals in 2022. If Hardy has anything to do with it, love will serve as Utah’s north star in their quest back to relevance.

Hardy, the NBA’s youngest coach at age 36, said he views his role in the rebuild as two-fold: develop better basketball players, and better people.

“It may seem corny at times to certain people, but I really believe in it,” Hardy said. “I think it can make an impact on people’s lives.”

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He needs no better example, he said, than how the Jazz have responded to Hendricks’ injury.

“It reminds you that people are way more good than bad,” Hardy said. “And I think seeing how the guys have rallied around Taylor, it reminds you that there’s a lot more to this than dribbling and shooting.”


There are layers to why Hendricks’ injury cut so deep on this Jazz team.

For starters, the injury was so graphic, so difficult to look at that it left a scar on each person who witnessed it. Jazz guard Keyonte George shed tears. Hardy clinched his jaw and winced. Forward John Collins said his heart dropped. Two-way player Micah Potter, who was back home in Salt Lake City on assignment with Utah’s G League team, had to turn away from his television.

“I was watching it, so I had everything — the replays, the different angles … everything,” Potter said. “It was not fun to watch.”

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It was the third quarter of the Jazz’s third game of the season and Hendricks was running back on defense. As he approached the key, his left leg slipped, and as he tried to catch his balance, his right foot stuck on the court while the momentum of his sprint carried him forward.

His ankle came out of the socket and his lower leg shattered. As he looked at his foot dangling at an awkward angle, Hendricks covered his eyes with his hands. Dallas guard Kyrie Irving took one look and immediately turned away and headed toward the sideline.

Hendricks said the pain wasn’t severe — “on a scale of 1-to-10, it was about a six,” he said — but the image was devastating.

“I was just like … so shocked,” Hendricks said. “In my mind, I was having flashbacks of (Boston’s) Gordon Hayward on the floor with his ankle (in 2017). I was like, ‘Bro, this is the same thing … .’ It’s one thing to see it, but for it to actually be you? It’s like, crazy.”


Taylor Hendricks was wheeled out on a gurney after being injured in the third quarter against the Mavericks on Oct. 28. (Richard Rodriguez / Getty Images)

Another layer to the injury was the abrupt halt to the marked progress Hendricks had made over the summer. A 6-foot-9 forward, his rookie season was a trying affair, one that started in the G League and ended with 40 NBA games and only 856 minutes, fourth-fewest among 2023 lottery picks.

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Hardy said Hendricks showed glimpses of his defensive potential during his rookie season — at one time defending San Antonio Spurs phenom center Victor Wembanyama well — but Hendricks said he also learned that his 210-pound body was not ready to guard grown men.

“I remember a possession once when I was guarding (Nikola) Jokić, and I just felt helpless,” Hendricks said. “There was like literally nothing I could do to stop him. I just felt skinny, like my body had a lot of work to do.”

Over the summer, he stayed in Salt Lake City and worked on his body. Hardy said Hendricks gained 17 pounds, muscle which Hendricks said was mostly distributed in his arms, chest and calves.

When training camp opened, Hardy’s eyebrows raised.

“He was a physical force in training camp,” Hardy said. “He was making toughness plays and athletic plays that were based around the development of his body. He had done everything we had asked him to do.”

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By opening night, he was no longer a candidate for the G League. He was no longer a project. He was a starter, and not only that, he was the focal point of the Jazz defense. In his first three games, he guarded Memphis point guard Ja Morant, Golden State forward Jonathan Kuminga and Dallas superstar Luka Dončić.

“I mean, he was going to guard everybody for us this season,” Hardy said.

But as he sat on the court in Dallas, with his head in his hands, all of his plans, all of his dreams were as shattered as his right leg.


When fellow second-year Utah forward Brice Sensabaugh heard about Hendrick’s season-ending prognosis, it sparked a memory deep inside him.

When Sensabaugh was in high school in Orlando, Fla., he had a knee injury that sidelined him for nine months. The swelling and pain in his knee turned out to be nothing compared to his mental anguish. He felt detached from the team and was overcome with anxiety about his playing future. On top of it all, he was bored.

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“It was a dark time for me,” Sensabaugh said. “But I vividly remember this one day … it has stuck with me.”

As he lay in bed with his leg elevated, his teammates brought him a care basket, filled with his favorite snacks and various gift cards. It was so thoughtful and so welcomed that it has never left Sensabaugh.

So on Nov. 22, two weeks after Hendricks had surgery to repair his ankle and leg, Sensabaugh appeared at his front door with a gift basket.

Stuffed with Hendricks’ favorite snacks — Spicy Sweet Chili Doritos and Twix candy bars — and DoorDash gift cards, Sensabaugh delivered the basket to Hendricks. It was good timing, too: Nov. 22 was Hendricks’ 21st birthday.

“Just something to keep his spirits high,” Sensabaugh said. “It’s easy to kind of give up and lose yourself in those moments, and I know that little things like that can make a world of difference.”

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The two talked about their faith, and how the injury could be part of God’s plan. And as they watched television of Hendricks’ alma mater — Central Florida — playing Wisconsin (Hendricks’ twin brother Tyler is a reserve for the Knights), Hendricks shifted the conversation.

It was his time to show love to Sensabaugh.

Hendricks could sense Sensabaugh was struggling with the November schedule. There was a stretch where Sensabaugh didn’t play for four consecutive games. However, the previous night in San Antonio, he played and scored 18 points.

“We just talked about where his mind was at, and how he felt … and he was in a good place,” Hendricks said.

The next night, Sensabaugh would not see action again, but he remembered his chat with Hendricks.

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“He’s so positive, and he just has a good spirit,” Sensabaugh said.

His teammate’s positivity stuck with Sensabaugh, and his outlook remained optimistic that his fortunes would change. In the next three games, Sensabaugh scored 16, 13 and 13 points.

No one knows if the two teammates showing love played a role, but it certainly didn’t hurt.

“Being there … it was just a good moment, I think for both of us,” Sensabaugh said.


When Hardy started his first training camp in  2022, he knew the Jazz were embarking on a rebuilding process that would not only be trying but also expose players to criticism and ridicule for the inevitable losses ahead.

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He wanted to create an environment where players felt valued and comfortable, and as a former assistant under Gregg Popovich and Ime Udoka, he felt connection would be a key component to the team succeeding.

“I think we live in a really negative world,” Hardy said. “Being in this business, with the nature of social media and the kind of feedback our players receive via Twitter, Instagram … it’s all negative. And people are nasty. So it was important for me to make ‘Show Love’ our mantra every day because I want our gym to be a place where our players want to be.”

He tells his players that the first thing they need to do is show love to themselves. Then show love to your teammates. Show love to your family. The fans. The community.

“Show love, yeah!” point guard Collin Sexton said with a smile. “Each and every day. Whether it’s to the janitor, the cooks, the training staff … a kind gesture goes a long way.”

Hendricks said Sexton has been one of the most frequent teammates to text or call him, and much like Sensabaugh, there is history behind Sexton’s actions.

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In 2021, when Sexton was with the Cleveland Cavaliers, he tore his meniscus in his right knee in the season’s 11th game. He missed the rest of the season.

“Mentally, it was super, super tough for me,” Sexton said. “I didn’t get a lot of calls from guys, and I wasn’t able to be with them physically. It was just a really tough time for me. So I feel like it’s important for us to be there for (Hendricks). Because sometimes in this league, you can just float and go about your day … but sometimes you need a pat on the back, sometimes you need a hug, sometimes you need someone to be just be like, ‘Yo, I’m here with you.’ ”

After spending the season mostly away from the Cavs, Sexton was traded to Utah as part of the Mitchell deal. The detachment and the transactional feel of the experience have stayed with him and prompted him to be proactive in keeping Hendricks involved.

“As a team, we are just trying to keep him close, and keep good spirits around him,” Sexton said. “You gotta show love and make sure they know that.”

It’s why on Nov. 12, just six days after his surgery, Hendricks was greeted with a group hug and a special assignment.

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When Hendricks arrived at the team’s practice facility, the players lost their minds.

“Everybody started screaming and chanting his name,” Sensabaugh. “Seeing his smile … it reminded us as a team how important it is to have all the guys around.”

As the team started its drills, Hardy didn’t mind that players couldn’t help themselves as they sporadically broke out of line to run toward Hendricks on the sideline and hug him.

“Heck, I even did the same,” Hardy said.

As Hendricks took a seat, an idea popped into Hardy’s head. He happened to sit next to Hardy’s whiteboard, which the coach uses to diagram plays. Hardy told Hendricks to grab the board and a pen.

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“It wasn’t super well thought out,” Hardy said with a chuckle. “But I sent the first group over and told Taylor he was drawing up the first play that night.”


On Nov. 12, Hendricks (right) returned to practice for the first time since his surgery. Coach Will Hardy had him diagram the first play against Phoenix. (Courtesy of Gabby Stockard / Utah Jazz)

The Jazz were set to play Phoenix, and the first play would come from Hendricks.

As Hendricks scribbled and plotted, Hardy chuckled.

“It was unequivocally like … not a good play,” Hardy said.

It was a coach’s nightmare: an isolation play designed for John Collins, Hendricks’ seatmate on the team charters.

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“It was one pass, not a lot of movement, and I think the guys got a kick out of it because they know that would be the exact opposite of what Coach would want,” Hardy said. “But it was so funny because the way Taylor described it, he was like, ‘You’re gonna get the ball to John and then John … just work it out.’ ”

Added Collins: “The part that was the cherry on top for me was Coach asked him, ‘Anything else?’ And he said, ‘Nah, John, just go to work.”

That night, the Hendricks play was called, and sure enough, Collins scored.

“John ran back and pointed at the bench, like, ‘Appreciate you, T!’ … it was funny,” Hardy said. “It was a good moment for the guys … but I don’t know if I will do it again.”

It wasn’t a textbook Hardy play, but it was exactly what Hardy envisioned when he adopted Show Love: A group bonding while thinking about others more than themselves.

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“Showing love, that’s exactly what we were doing,” Collins said. “Showing love as a team, a group, and giving T-Henny that feeling we are still with him, still thinking about him. It’s a cold and lonely road out there when you are injured, but we are with him.”

Added Hendricks: “When I am with them, I still feel like I’m playing. It feels like I’m still right there with them. They don’t baby me in any way, or show pity … they just keep it 100 and treat me regular. I just feel comfortable.”

Now, Hardy said, the real work begins.

It’s time to make Hendricks into what Hardy calls “a sicko.”


The toughest days are not yet here for Hendricks. He still can’t walk and is months away from beginning any type of basketball activity. There are long stretches of monotony ahead.

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The team has already said he won’t participate in summer league, and it has intentionally not placed any timeline on his recovery.

What Hardy hopes is that in the time Hendricks is unable to play, he becomes a student of the game.

“I want him to become a film junkie, become a sicko,” Hardy said. “Become the guy who knows all the top players in the league, and what their tendencies are. Let’s try to find a positive in this while we are getting his body healthy.”

Unbeknown to Hardy, Hendricks was already well ahead of him. Since his rookie season, he has been keeping a database on players he guards, complete with tendencies, strengths, weaknesses, favorite moves and their matchup history.

“Let’s see, I can pull it up … “ Hendricks said as he scrolled to the notes app on his phone. “I’ve got Luka, Paul George, Evan Mobley, Wembanyama, Jalen Green, Jonathan Kuminga, Ja Morant, Kyrie … a bunch … .”

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His reports read much like those a team’s advance scout distributes to the team before each game, but these come from Hendricks’ thoughts. For example: his report on Kuminga, the Golden State forward:

“Strong right hand drive … not looking to shoot 3’s. He loves the post spin, so keep your hands on his hip. He is very active … he’s looking to score, but not looking to pass. And be aware, when he sets (a screen) off ball he is looking for the lob, and they just throw it.”

He spends every night watching NBA games and has found himself drawn to two young and elite defenders: Atlanta’s Dyson Daniels and Minnesota’s Jaden McDaniels.

“Dyson Daniels, he uses his hands a lot, like he traces the ball at all times and is ready to pick it. I wasn’t really doing that, but I feel that’s huge, because I’ve noticed the offensive guy at some point (shows) you the ball, and Dyson does a great job of taking advantage of that and reading that,” Hendricks said. “And I’ve been watching Jaden since last year because we have a similar body type.”

Hardy said the Jazz plan to introduce Hendricks to analytics, while also having him learn about situational basketball, and understanding the fine line between winning and losing in the NBA.

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“We’re going to have to find the silver linings of all this,” Hardy said. “So let’s try to have a deeper understanding of the game as a whole. And it will be fun to see what interests him.”

Along the way, the Jazz players intend to keep Hendricks included in their social circle. Not only is Hendricks a key element in the group text chain — players say he is among the most goofy and humorous participants — he is vital to the fabric of what the Jazz are hoping to build: a team with good players and good people.

“The guys reaching out to him and keeping him involved is important, just from a human level,” Hardy said. “Like, screw the team … this is a human thing. He’s part of our messed up little family.”

(Top photo: Gabby Stockard / Utah Jazz)



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A new law in Utah allows students to opt out of coursework that conflicts with their beliefs

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A new law in Utah allows students to opt out of coursework that conflicts with their beliefs


OGDEN, Utah — The syllabus in 18-year-old Madelynn Wells’ introductory film studies class assigned “Jaws” first, and then the Spanish dark comedy “Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown.” She said she watched those, and did the written assignments with no problem. 

Around the third week of the term, the assignment was a film called “Pariah.” She hadn’t heard of it, so she looked it up and found that it was a coming-of-age film about a young woman who turned away from her conservative family to live as a lesbian.

Wells, a freshman at Weber State University who said she’s a devout Catholic and a political conservative, felt uneasy. She didn’t want to watch the film, and the idea of writing a paper on it made her even more uncomfortable. 

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“I feel like whenever you put something in writing it just feels more serious,” Wells said. 

She decided to drop the class. 

In Utah, with a large and devout religious population, Wells is not alone in trying to uphold her religious beliefs while getting a college education. 

A new state law offers these students a unique protection: If something in a class conflicts with their strongly held religious or personal beliefs, students can ask their professor for an alternative assignment or exam. And as long as their request doesn’t change the fundamental nature of the course, the professor is now required by law to allow the student to opt out. 

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The law has some guardrails that protect against accommodation requests that are universally considered absurd. For example, a student won’t be able to claim a moral objection to math in a college algebra course. And the law requires faculty to make these accommodations only in courses that are part of a college’s general education requirement or are required for the student’s major.

Despite those protections, the law is polarizing. Proponents say that students shouldn’t be required to do assignments or take exams on topics that compromise their morals unless it’s absolutely necessary to advance in their field of study. Opponents argue that engaging with beliefs they don’t hold helps students understand their own views better. 

This Utah law is the first of its kind targeting higher education, but it’s an extension of concerns being expressed at the K-12 level. There have been efforts to emphasize conservative and religious values in public schools, and limit what can be taught about subjects including racial history, gender and sexuality. The Utah law is also reminiscent of a case the Supreme Court took up last year, in which the justices sided with parents of public school students who wanted to take their children out of class during lessons that violate their religious beliefs — such as using books about LGBTQ+ identities. President Donald Trump has said that colleges are “corrupting our youth and society with woke, socialist, and anti-American ideology.” 

And over the past few years, there have been dozens of state-level bills — including one in Utah — banning initiatives or programs that promote diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI. Lawmakers in other states have gone after what’s taught in the classroom and how certain issues, like race and gender identity, are discussed. The legislative approach here is different. Instead of dictating what can or cannot be taught, the new Utah law shifts the power to students who now have the agency to decide when curriculum crosses a line for them. 

Amy Reid, who directs the Freedom to Learn initiative at the free speech advocacy organization PEN America, said it’s the responsibility of faculty to help all students get the most out of what’s being taught. Some accommodations — like those for students with disabilities or religious students who need to reschedule exams for religious holidays — help faculty meet that goal, she said. This one, she said, does not. 

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Rather than “encourage students to shut their eyes or plug their ears or throw a book out the window,” she said, “You encourage students to engage with ideas, and you provide them with the support that they need — which can be different for individual students — so that they are able to complete the work.”

“Being exposed to ideas that you disagree with doesn’t mean you’re going to change your mind, but it should make you clearer about what it is that you believe and why,” Reid added.

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Wells, a zoology major, was taking the film course to fulfill a general education arts credit. After dropping it, she had more than two dozen other classes to choose from to earn that credit. She picked photography. 

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But if she had needed the course to graduate, she said she would have had to swallow her discomfort or work up the courage to talk to her professor about an alternative assignment. In the case of the film studies course, perhaps she could have watched a different coming-of-age film, or another film by a Black screenwriter — depending on the goal of that assignment. (Her professor declined to comment.) 

Seth Mulkey, a junior at Utah State University in Logan, said he felt uncomfortable in his general education biology class when the course topic turned to evolution. Mulkey, an evangelical Christian, said he believes that God created the Earth in seven days.

“It can be a bit disheartening to have to learn about something and have something proposed as fact when it’s not something that you’re in agreement with,” Mulkey said. He tries to keep his beliefs to himself and instead, he said, “I’ll do my best to engage from an intellectual standpoint with this idea. So, if this is the assumption we’re making about how this works, we’ll talk about it, we’ll see what conclusions are there.” 

Even if the law had been in effect when he took that biology class, Mulkey said he wouldn’t have asked for an accommodation to get out of uncomfortable group discussions. But writing assignments might have been a different story. 

“If the assignment were to write an essay supporting this view, write an essay about why evolution is correct and why it is the right view of the creation of the world — I think at that point, I would want to step back,” Mulkey said. 

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Politicians say left-wing professors push their views. New poll shows students don’t see it that way

Utah appears to be the most religious state in the country. About 76 percent of Utah residents are religious, compared to only about 49 percent nationwide, according to a 2024 report from the Gardner Policy Institute at the University of Utah. Data from the Pew Research Center shows that about 50 percent of all residents are members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and another 13 percent identify as members of other Christian denominations. 

Michael J. Petersen, a Republican state representative from Logan, said the idea for the bill came after his daughter was assigned to write a letter to a legislator in support of LGBTQ+ rights as part of a master’s degree program at an out-of-state college. The assignment was in conflict with her beliefs, so she called her dad for help. 

He helped her write “something that was very, very bland.” She moved on — and he began drafting the legislation. 

Had Petersen’s daughter been an undergraduate student at a public college in Utah, the law would have helped her in two ways. It would have prohibited her instructor from requiring that she take a specific public stance (such as sending a letter) on anything that is a “political, social, religious, moral, or community matter.” And it would have allowed her to ask her professor for an alternative assignment.

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Petersen said he believes that his daughter’s assignment was to write the letter and also send it. (The Hechinger Report was not able to independently confirm this.)

Most faculty and education advocates, whatever their politics, agree that requiring her to send the letter would be inappropriate.

Mike Gavin, the president and CEO of the Alliance for Higher Education, said it is reasonable for a professor to ask a student to take on other perspectives during an in-class debate or in a written assignment. But it shouldn’t be taken outside the classroom. 

“In no way, shape or form should they be required to publicly sign their names to something. That would be very problematic,” Gavin said. “That, I think, would be a personnel issue that an institution should handle. That is not an academic freedom issue. That is actually using students for things that are political.” 

And, he said, in 30 years in higher education he’s never heard of it happening. 

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Gavin said he thinks it’s unnecessary to give students such broad permission to opt out of coursework that conflicts with their beliefs. There are cases in which it’s appropriate, but those already come up and are handled on a case-by-case basis between professors and students, he said. 

“It’s entirely probable — I say this facetiously and also seriously — that a freshman in college doesn’t know everything yet,” Gavin said. “They need to engage with ideas they have not come across. Even if they end up being uncomfortable for a minute, that doesn’t mean that they’re traumatized.” 

Conservative-leaning civic centers now teach courses at public colleges 

Outside of Utah, many people might gawk at the idea of students opting out of coursework that makes them feel uncomfortable, and worry about the broader implications of such a policy. But among Utahns, there seem to be wider-ranging and more nuanced perspectives.

It’s partly because they’ve been down this road before. In 1998, a Mormon theater student at the University of Utah objected to reading a script with profanity. The student sued the university, accusing faculty of essentially pushing her out after she was given the choice to recite the lines as written or leave the program. 

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A settlement agreement required the university to write a policy to deal with coursework objections related to sincerely held beliefs. But the policy still requires that students be able to understand and articulate ideas and theories that are important to the course, regardless of whether they agree with or believe them. The new law does away with that requirement. 

High school speech and debate allows students to find common ground 

Sarah Projansky, the vice provost for faculty and academic affairs at the University of Utah and a professor of film and gender studies who has examined the representation of sexual violence in film and media, said she’s had students walk out of class film screenings during intense moments. If a student says they can’t watch a certain film, she says she works with them to find an alternative. 

“It’s not my business why a student can’t be there. Religion, sincerely held belief of conscience, memory, family memory. It doesn’t matter, they can’t be there,” Projansky said. “Anything that’s not pedagogically necessary is very easy to accommodate.”

Nicole Allen, a communications professor at Utah State, said she thought the law was “a solution in search of a problem,” given existing policies at public institutions and the fact that most professors are able to handle these issues on a case-by-case basis. 

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Still, she thinks there’s no need for students to experience “gratuitous discomfort” in the name of academia, she said, as long as accommodations wouldn’t take away from the big-picture goals of the course. 

Although the law doesn’t concern what professors are allowed to teach, some worry that it could still influence academic freedom.

Reid, of PEN America, worries that faculty may overcorrect. They might leave controversial reading materials off their syllabuses or dodge subjects that tend to make students feel uncomfortable, in order to avoid consequences. Those range from the extra work of writing new assignments and test questions to the bureaucratic headache that comes with denying a request to, in the worst and least likely scenario, becoming caught up in a public controversy if a student takes issue with something they’re being taught. 

She said it makes sense that professors would not want to end up like Melissa McCoul, who was fired from Texas A&M University after a student recorded her teaching about gender identity, or Mel Curth, the graduate teaching assistant who lost her job at the University of Oklahoma after she failed a student who had turned in a poorly written psychology paper using only the Bible as a source. 

Behind the turmoil of federal attacks on colleges, some states are coming after tenure 

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Though students can now choose to opt out of coursework on difficult topics, many Utah public colleges go to great lengths to encourage them to do the opposite outside the classroom. Many institutions host regular forums where students can come together for facilitated conversations on controversial topics and engage with classmates who hold differing opinions. Often, the colleges offer free lunch to incentivize students to dig into tough topics. 

At Weber State, the dialogue programming is run by the Walker Institute of Politics and Public Service. On a recent Wednesday, a group of students, staff, and current and retired professors came together at a long, conference room table to discuss the war in Iran over sub sandwiches and chips. 

Strict rules protect the integrity of conversations: Everyone has to read the same article, there’s to be no use of tech devices and no note-taking, and nothing that is said should be shared outside that space. 

Leah A. Murray, the institute’s director and a professor of political science and philosophy, said the rules exist so that everyone feels comfortable speaking freely. (The group made an exception to the no note-taking rule for the reporter in the room.) 

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Sometimes Murray selects the topic, but sometimes the topic comes from a student.

Adam Nichols, a 43-year-old junior who is studying to become a high school teacher, said he proposed the idea to Murray because he wanted to be able to talk about the Iran conflict with people in his life, but he felt he didn’t quite have the language to feel comfortable doing so.

When he’s been forced to reckon with his strongly held beliefs, both in class and in various Walker Institute Talks, he said, “It forces me to reassess other areas where I may have been wrong. And I would much rather be wrong and be corrected than to continue under those false pretenses.” 

Despite her appreciation for difficult conversations with people she doesn’t necessarily agree with, Murray sees value in making the types of accommodations in the law. Her views are informed by her own experience as a vegan, animal-loving undergraduate who opted to fulfill her science requirement with geology instead of biology to avoid having to dissect a pig.

“I was unwilling to do that,” Murray said. “It was a violation of my conscience at that time.”

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She said that experience has also informed the way she handles difficult issues with her students. At the beginning of each term, she says, “If you’re going to go to hell for learning this, please drop this class.”

She delivers it just like that, she said, and her students always laugh. But she’s serious. 

“I don’t want to be responsible for your salvation being denied because you learn something in this class.”

Contact staff writer Olivia Sanchez at 212-678-8402 or osanchez@hechingerreport.org

This story about religious beliefs and college students was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for the Hechinger newsletter.

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Utah Royals FC Returns Home to Host Racing Louisville FC Chasing Eight Match Unbeaten Streak | Utah Royals

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Utah Royals FC Returns Home to Host Racing Louisville FC Chasing Eight Match Unbeaten Streak |  Utah Royals


HERRIMAN, Utah (Thursday, May 14, 2026) — Utah Royals FC (5-2-2, 17 pts) returns to the Beehive State this weekend to host Racing Louisville FC (2-1-5, 7 pts) for the first meeting between the two clubs during the 2026 campaign on Sunday, May 17, at America First Field. Kickoff is scheduled for 6:00 p.m. MT.

Utah enters Sunday’s contest following a hard-fought 0-0 road draw against Bay FC at PayPal Park, earning another clean sheet while continuing the club’s streak of never allowing Bay FC to score at home against Utah Royals FC. The point on the road marked Utah’s 11th away point of the 2026 campaign, equaling the club’s combined road-point total from both the 2024 and 2025 seasons.

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The Royals were tested throughout the opening half, with one of Bay FC’s best opportunities coming in the 40th minute when Racheal Kundananji broke forward on a dangerous run through the middle of the pitch before entering the penalty area. Midfielder Narumi came up with a crucial defensive stop, diving in front of the attempt and deflecting the shot away with her leg to preserve the scoreless draw. The sequence highlighted Utah’s defensive commitment, with multiple Royals players sprinting back to disrupt the Bay FC attack and protect the clean sheet heading into halftime.

Utah continued to remain organized defensively throughout the second half, limiting Bay FC’s opportunities and securing its fifth clean sheet of the 2026 season. The result extended the Royals’ unbeaten streak to seven consecutive matches while also leaving Bay FC winless against Utah through five all-time meetings between the clubs.

With the result, Utah extended its unbeaten streak to seven consecutive matches, continuing the Royals’ impressive run of form heading into Sunday’s home match against Racing Louisville FC.

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Head Coach Jimmy Coenraets and his squad now look to build on an impressive seven-match unbeaten streak, alongside multiple consecutive clean sheets against Chicago Stars FC, Seattle Reign FC, Angel City FC, Houston Dash, and most recently Bay FC. The result against Bay extended Utah’s strong run of form as the Royals continue to establish themselves as one of the league’s toughest defensive sides. Utah now returns home looking to carry that momentum into America First Field in front of its home crowd while aiming to extend both its unbeaten streak and defensive success.

Now in his second full season at the helm, Head Coach Coenraets continues molding a balanced squad built on defensive discipline, midfield control, and attacking creativity. Sunday’s contest presents another opportunity for Utah to extend its unbeaten streak to eight consecutive matches while collecting crucial points at home in front of the club’s supporters at America First Field.

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Racing Louisville FC enters the matchup with a 2-1-5 record, most recently earning a 3-1 home victory over Portland Thorns FC after suffering back-to-back defeats. Led by Head Coach Bev Yanez, Racing Louisville FC will look to build on its return to winning form and secure all three points on the road at America First Field.

Sunday’s contest marks the tenth match of the 2026 NWSL regular season for the Royals and the ninth for Racing Louisville FC, with both sides aiming to secure valuable early-season points and strengthen their position in the league standings.

WATCH LIVE on Victory+ with Josh Eastern and McCall Zerboni :: Utah Royals FC vs Racing Louisville | America First Field | 6:00 p.m. MT

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WATCH LIVE on Victory+ with Kelley O’Hara and Ali Riley :: Utah Royals FC vs Racing Louisville | America First Field | 6:00 p.m. MT

LISTEN via KSL Sports Radio (102.7 FM / 1160 AM) starting at 5:30 p.m. MT

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Following Sunday’s match, Utah Royals FC will remain in the Beehive State to host inaugural side Denver Summit FC on Saturday, May 23, at America First Field. Kickoff is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. MT, with tickets available for purchase here.





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‘It means building hope’: USU brings independence to refugee group through chicken coop project

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‘It means building hope’: USU brings independence to refugee group through chicken coop project


SALT LAKE CITY (ABC4) — Refugee communities in Utah are being supplied with farm-fresh eggs and poultry thanks to a collaborative effort between Utah State University and Utah Refugee Goats.

According to Utah Refugee Goats (URG), their goat and poultry farm supplies refugee communities with reliable, affordable and culturally familiar sources of meat. Thanks to Utah State University (USU) agriculture students, it’s getting some ‘egg’stra attention.

Over the last 10 weeks, Brad Borges, a Ph.D candidate for career and technical education, has been taking a hands-on approach with his students to construct a new chicken coop with the support of a mobile construction lab and a $20,000 grant.

According to URG President Abdikadir Hussein, the coop is equipped with fully enclosed roofs and will increase their flock by 40%, meaning faster growth for the Salt Lake City-based farm. As a refugee, though, Hussein said it means even more.

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“It means resiliency. It means independence. It means building hope. Hopelessness is something that is killing the most refugees inside,” he expressed. “I came as a refugee, and hope is the last everything that ever came to mind.”

“We feel like even the birds are happy, like they want to get into there,” he added.

From the student perspective, being able to build a project that will be used to generate money for refugee groups was incredibly engaging and inspirational, according to Borges. The sentiment is shared by Joseph Okoh, extension assistant professor of small acreage livestock.

“It’s a win-win situation for everyone,” Okoh said. One, we are getting the coop for the refugee group, these students are going to learn from the construction of the coop, and not only that, everybody is going to be happy to be part of this community to be able to develop a better coop for better production.”

To learn more about issues facing refugees in Utah and how to support them, visit Utah Refugee Goats’ website.

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