Human rights activist Jim Keady is in the Twin Cities to discuss his work exposing conditions in Nike Shoe factories. Keady spent one month last summer living in Indonesia on the wages of an average Nike factory worker. But his interest in the world's top shoe manufacturer started a couple of years earlier, when he was fired from his coaching job at St. John's University in New York for refusing to abide by a contract that required him to wear and promote Nike products. Keady says it would have been morally wrong to support Nike while workers in Indonesia can barely support themselves on Nike wages.