Gospel Tangents Podcast

BYU Law School Almost Lost Accreditation (Part 6 of 7)
In the early 1970s, BYU opened up a brand-new law school. I was surprised to learn that the American Bar Association considered not accrediting the university due to the racial ban in the Church. Dr. Matt Harris describes some of these little-known issues that new BYU president and lawyer Dallin Oaks dealt with this potentially fatal blow to the law school.
Matt: There is new law school popping up and the American Bar Association, they send a letter to Dallin H. Oaks, this brand-new president. He’s a young man. He’s just left his tenured position at the University of Chicago where he went to school and then subsequently joined their law faculty. BYU recruited him to replace Wilkinson. So in 1971, Dallin Oaks comes on board and Oaks receives this letter. “Oh my gosh, they’re not going to accredit us. They’re threatening to not accredit us because of the church’s policy towards blacks.”
GT: On the law school.
Matt: On the law school. They just got it up and running.
GT: So let me make sure. So, 68-69 we’re having these civil rights problems with the entire school in general.
Matt: Yes.
GT: We hire some black faculty. So that gets them off their back.
Matt: Yes.
GT: But now 1971 comes and the bar association is threatening to take away the accreditation.
Matt: Yes, and a year earlier, Nixon, the IRS with Bob Jones is out. This is all going on at the same time.
Check out our conversation….
Don’t miss our other conversations with Dr. Harris.
351: Civil Rights Investigation at BYU
350: Sports Protests Against BYU
349: Race & Religious Minorities at BYU
348: How Brazil Influenced Official Declaration 2
347: Did Nixon & Carter Pressure BYU Over Race?