then we will hear from william adler, the author of "the man who nenever died: the life, times and legacy of joe hill, american labor icon." i read this as a store gutted for "the new york times" and it is a marvelous historical research and the book really shed some important new light on the case of the labor hero, joe hill, raising new questions about how he was railroaded to a conviction and to his execution before firing squad in 1915. and last you will hear from brian purnell, one of the co-authors of black power at work community control, affirmative action and the construction industry. brian is professor of african-american studies at bowdoin college in maine. brian tells american stories of protests here in brooklyn five decades ago in 1963 when black construction workers and black ministers the conference and groups like kallur engaged in a sit-down protests to demand integration of construction projects and construction unions that were 99% plus white. many of these protests were at a downtown medical state center right here in brooklyn and someone named malcolm x participated