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BYU Law School is ranked in the top 25. 50 years ago, it struggled to recruit a faculty
An opening in the president’s chair at Brigham Young University in 1971 coincided with the announcement that the flagship university of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints would start a new law school.
President Harold B. Lee decided to interview a highly regarded professor from the prestigious University of Chicago law school about both of the changes.
The law school was a bad idea, the presidential candidate said. But President Dallin H. Oaks got the BYU job. And he also inherited the legitimate problems he’d seen in launching a law school.
“I was not in favor of the law school because as an experienced legal educator, I was realistic about what it would take to have a first-class law school,” says President Oaks, who now holds the exact same position today that President Lee did then — first counselor in the First Presidency and vice chair of the BYU board of trustees.
“I knew that the church couldn’t afford to have a law school unless it was first rate, and I was skeptical that we could do it,” he says, in an extended interview with the Deseret News.
There was the problem of hiring the faculty, finding a dean, recruiting students, acquiring a law library and achieving accreditation.
President Oaks and his associates overcame all these hurdles and more to make BYU’s J. Reuben Clark Law School a precocious member of the top 25 in the latest U.S. News & World Report law school rankings.
Most top law schools were founded in the 1800s, and, in fact, all but two of the report’s top 28 schools were founded before 1910 — UCLA in 1949 and BYU in 1973.
Read how BYU's law school recruited its first generation of leaders and became a top 25 school.
After consecrating her life, talents and great spiritual maturity to her family and the gospel of Jesus Christ, Sister Kathleen Johnson Eyring, 82 — the wife of President Henry B. Eyring, second counselor in the First Presidency — died Sunday, Oct. 15, 2023, in her home in Bountiful, Utah, surrounded by her family.
“Everything I’ve done in the Church, my marriage to Hal, any call I’ve accepted, I have done with deep conviction that Joseph Smith is a prophet, the Church is true, the Church is led by prophets, and the priesthood is restored and is upon the earth,” Sister Eyring said in a Church News interview when her husband was called to the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.
Throughout their 60-plus years of marriage and President Eyring’s close to 40 years of full-time Church service, Sister Eyring remained her husband’s biggest support, counselor and confidante.
In recent years, President Eyring made mention of his wife’s declining health. In a Church News interview in 2023, President Eyring said that although she could no longer speak, she would sometimes offer a smile, as if to say, “We’re still in this together.”
Throughout their marriage, President Eyring said, he always got the feeling that his wife’s first priority was to try to do what the Lord wanted.
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