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DESCRIPTION:J. Eric Cobb ED Of Buildings Trades South Central Wisconsin To Speak At 
 "Eyewitness Reports From The Wisconsin" on July 9 at the Marie Fireman's 
 Hall in San Francisco. There will also be a screening of videos from 
 Wisconsin\n\n\nPress Release-J. Eric Cobb ED Of Buildings Trades South 
 Central Wisconsin To Speak At "Eyewitness Reports From The Wisconsin on 
 Protests"\n\nContact:	Joan Juster				FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: June 24, 
 2010\nCell: 		415-265-9768\nE-mail: 	justerhill(at)aol.com                  
                  \n\n18th Annual San Francisco LaborFest Presents\n“A 
 MONTH IN MADISON:\nEYEWITNESS REPORTS FROM THE WISCONSIN 
 PROTESTS”\nSaturday, July 9, 2011 AT 7:00 pm\nMARINE FIREMEN’S HALL – 
 224 2nd  STREET AT HOWARD, SAN FRANCISCO\n\nSAN FRANCISCO, CA – San 
 Francisco LaborFest will present A MONTH IN MADISON: EYEWITNESS REPORTS 
 FROM THE WISCONSIN PROTESTS on Saturday, July 9, 2011 at 7:00 p.m. at the 
 Marine Firemen’s Hall located at 224 2nd Street at Howard, San Francisco. 
  \nJ. Eric Cobb, Executive Director, Building Trades Council of South 
 Central Wisconsin will be attending the meeting a well.\n\nA MONTH IN 
 MADISON is an evening of short films from this year’s historic Wisconsin 
 protests, curated and hosted by San Francisco documentarian Joan Juster of 
 Juster Hill Productions, who spent a month in Madison on the front lines of 
 the protests.  \nIn February 2011, on the heels of populist revolutions in 
 Tunisia and Egypt, the world was stunned to see thousands of protesters in 
 Madison, Wisconsin take to the streets, then occupy the Capitol. They were 
 protesting a state budget bill that proposed deep cuts to education, health 
 care, and social services for the poor. Most contentious of all, however, 
 the bill threatened to take away the right to collective bargaining from 
 public sector unions. The entire state was in an uproar.  As details of the 
 budget repair bill emerged, it become clear that this was not just the 
 beginning of a major story with national implications, but a watershed 
 moment in American history.\nAs a documentarian with ties to Wisconsin, 
 Joan Juster wanted to bear witness to history, and help document the events 
 as they were happening. So on February 23rd she bought a one-way ticket to 
 Madison, arriving at the Capitol with $20 in her pocket and no plans as to 
 how to live, or how she would get home. She ended up staying a month, 
 recording stories and building alliances with other filmmakers, 
 journalists, historians and others who were both making history and 
 documenting it.\nIn A MONTH IN MADISON, Juster will tell the story of the 
 protests through short films by a variety of filmmakers, and her own 
 stories about what she experienced in Madison. The films include polished 
 mini-documentaries, never-released raw footage that shows what life was 
 really like among the protesters in the Capitol, rousing protest songs, and 
 interviews with protesters.  \n“Five months later, the protests are far 
 from over,” said Juster.  “The hardy Wisconsinites who protested in the 
 freezing cold are now pitching tents outside the Capitol in summer’s 
 heat. While the protesters may not be as visible, and the news cameras have 
 gone away, the real work of recall elections, canvassing, and rebuilding 
 their democracy continues.”\nFilmmakers whose work will be included in A 
 MONTH IN MADISON include (alphabetically):  Sandy Andina and Stephen Lee 
 Rich; Jeremy Gotcher and Steve Gotcher; Aaron Granat; Dusan Harming; Paul 
 Iannacchino, Jr.; Shahin Izadi; Joan Juster; Kenn Lonngren; Luciano 
 Matheron,; Ben Reiser and V05; Mike Scholtz; Matthew Wisniewski. More 
 filmmakers will be announced when confirmed.\nAdmission to A MONTH IN 
 MADISON is by $10 suggested donation. However, no one will be turned away 
 for lack of funds. A portion of the proceeds will benefit both San 
 Francisco LaborFest and Defend Wisconsin.\n\nTo arrange for interviews 
 contact: Joan Juster, 415-265-9768, justerhill@aol.com.\n\nAbout 
 LaborFest\nLaborFest was established in 1994 to institutionalize the 
 history and culture of working people in an annual labor cultural, film and 
 arts festival that takes place throughout the month of July, the 
 anniversary of the 1934 “Bloody Thursday” event. On that day, two 
 workers were shot and killed in San Francisco; they were supporting the 
 longshoremen and maritime workers strike. This incident brought about the 
 San Francisco General Strike which shut down the entire city and led to 
 hundreds of thousands of workers joining the trade union movement.\nThe 
 Organizing Committee of LaborFest is composed of unionists and unorganized 
 workers, cultural workers and supporters of labor education and history. We 
 encourage all unions not only to support us with endorsements and 
 contributions but also to include activities about their own union members, 
 their history and the work that they do.\nWe support the establishment of 
 LaborFests around the country and internationally. There are now LaborFests 
 in Japan, Argentina, Bolivia, South Africa, and Turkey. The need to build 
 local, national and international solidarity is critical if labor is going 
 to face the challenges it faces on all fronts. LaborFests help bring our 
 struggles together in art, film and music.\nFor more information on 
 LaborFest visit www.laborfest.net\n\nThe entire 2011 LaborFest schedule can 
 be downloaded here:  
 http://www.laborfest.net/2011/2011BookletWhole.pdf\n\nAbout Defend 
 Wisconsin\n\nDefend Wisconsin is a project of the Teaching Assistants’ 
 Association (TAA) at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Through 
 education and advocacy, the TAA strives to promote progressive values in 
 the Wisconsin tradition. We are committed to preserving the rights of all 
 citizens by helping to uphold the Wisconsin labor, education, and 
 healthcare systems that have served as models for states across the 
 country. We are also committed to supporting fair and democratic processes 
 in state and local governments.  \nThe TAA is a volunteer-run organization 
 representing nearly 3,000 graduate employees at the University of 
 Wisconsin–Madison. The oldest graduate employee union in the world, the 
 TAA began organizing in 1966. For more information, visit 
 taa-madison.org.\nFor more information on Defend Wisconsin visit 
 defendwisconsin@gmail.com\nAbout Joan Juster\n\nJoan Juster is a San 
 Francisco documentarian. With co-producer Paul Hill she produced the 
 award-winning feature-length documentary ALASKA FAR AWAY: THE NEW DEAL 
 PIONEERS OF THE MATANUSKA COLONY, which is currently airing on public 
 television stations around the country.  A companion film, WHERE THE RIVER 
 MATANUSKA FLOWS: STORIES OF ALASKA PIONEERS, has been shown on statewide 
 public television in Alaska. Both films are used in Alaska schools as part 
 of the history curriculum. \nIn addition to film production, Ms. Juster is 
 known for her work with AIDS Walk, AIDS Emergency Fund, the NAMES Project 
 AIDS Memorial Quilt, and San Francisco Opera.  For her part in documenting 
 the Wisconsin protests, she was recently invited to participate in an oral 
 history roundtable on the protests at the University of 
 Wisconsin-Madison.\nFor more information on Alaska Far Away visit 
 alaskafaraway@aol.com\n\nWHO:		San Francisco Laborfest and Joan 
 Juster\nWHAT:		A MONTH IN MADISON: EYEWITNESS REPORTS FROM THE WISCONSIN 
 PROTESTS\n\n		An evening of short films and stories about the historic 
 Wisconsin protests and presentation by J. Eric Cobb, Executive  Director of 
 South Central Wisconsin\n\nWHEN:		Saturday July 9, 2011 at 7:00 
 p.m.\n\nWHERE:	Marine Firemen’s Hall, 224 2nd Street (at Howard), San 
 Francisco\n\nMORE:		$10 suggested donation (no one turned away for lack of 
 funds)\n\n		Refreshments will be served. \n\nPHOTOS FOR “A MONTH IN 
 MADISON” at San Francisco LaborFest July 9, 2011\n\n\n\nSuffering from 
 Stage IV colon cancer and mad as hell at Governor Walker’s budget cuts, 
 protester Rudy Fox doesn’t mince words: “If I die in bed, I don’t 
 count. But if I die here, it will piss off a lot of people.”  From 
 Luciano Matheron’s film, RUDY FOX. (Photo Credit: Joan 
 Juster)\n\nMadison’s own disco/punk band V05 returns to LaborFest via a 
 film of their performance of  “Cheddar Revolution” at the March 5th 
 rally in Madison. (Photo Credit: V05)\n\nProtesters inside the Rotunda in 
 Madison. (Photo credit: Joan 
 Juster)\n\n\nhttps://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=215515748478794\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/06/28/18683158.php
SUMMARY:J. Eric Cobb ED Of Buildings Trades S.C. Wisconsin To Speak At "Eyewitness Report"
LOCATION:MARINE FIREMEN’S HALL\n224 2nd  STREET AT HOWARD\nSAN FRANCISCO
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/06/28/18683158.php
DTSTART:20110710T020000Z
DTEND:20110710T040000Z
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