
I am very excited to have a
full page ad in US News & World Report this week with an image of my 2004 book
Notre Dame vs the Klan (Loyola Press). The ad refers to a free speech controversy that raged on an Indiana college campus last year, when a student-employee was found guilty of racial harassment merely for reading my book. I know that's hard to believe, but it really happened. Here's an article in
NUVO, Indianapolis's alternative paper, who really broke the story, although it ended up being covered by the
Washington Post, the
Wall Street Journal, the
Associated Press, and many other outlets.
The ad was created by the
Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, an advocacy group that fights for freedom of speech on campus, and helped this particular student clear his name. It took a lot of work - for a time the school's administration was determined to admit no wrongdoing.
This book has had a lot of staying power, especially for a book that came out over five years ago. I think it speaks to the power of this story, set in 1924, when the state of Indiana, and the Notre Dame campus, was besieged by the Klan and anti-Catholic hatred.