Saturday, December 31, 2011

U2, Taylor Swift Top List Of 2011's Highest-Grossing Tours

U2's 360 Tour is the year's most profitable in the U.S. and worldwide.
By James Montgomery


U2's Bono
Photo: Harry Herd/ Getty Images

U2 didn't even release an album in 2011, but that didn't stop them raking in plenty of cash.

The iconic Irish quartet topped Pollstar's list of the year's most profitable tours, as their massive 360 Tour moved an impressive 2.4 million tickets worldwide, grossing more than $230 million globally. Their North American dates — which were postponed (and subsequently rescheduled) last year as Bono recovered from back surgery — made $156 million, good enough to give them the highest-grossing tour on this continent, too.

Taylor Swift had 2011's second most-profitable North American tour, as her expansive Speak Now jaunt racked up $97.7 million at the box office. Swift's country contemporary, Kenny Chesney, came in at #3, bringing in nearly $85 million in ticket sales, followed by Lady Gaga, who, despite wrapping up the North American leg of her Monster Ball tour in April, still managed to bring in $63.7 million at the box office. Bon Jovi rounds out Pollstar's top five, grossing more than $57 million.

Kanye West and Jay-Z's Throne tour ($48 million), Lil Wayne's "I Am Still Music" trek ($44 million), Britney Spears ($38 million) and Katy Perry ($28 million) also made the Top 25 in North America.

British boy band Take That's reunion tour came in second to U2's 360 trek based on worldwide receipts, making $224 million. Bon Jovi grossed nearly $150 million worldwide, good enough for third, with tours by Swift ($104 million worldwide) and Roger Waters ($103 million) rounding out the top five.

Also making Pollstar's worldwide list were Rihanna, the Foo Fighters, Justin Bieber, Usher and the Kings of Leon.

Did you attend any of the highest-grossing tours in 2011? Let us know in the comments!

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Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1676586/u2-highest-grossing-tour-2012.jhtml

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Report: Kim K. gets $600K for New Year's gig

Detractors may slug New Year's Eve as "amateur night," but for celebs and the pop culture industry, it's a professional night on the clock.

While Jay-Z, Kanye West and Coldplay headlined the opening of the Cosmopolitan in Las Vegas a year ago, one of the big draws this year is Kim Kardashian at TAO inside the Venetian.

TAO is paying the reality mogul $600,000 for a series of appearances beginning on New Year's Eve, according to multiple reports.

This year, Kardashian filmed several scenes for her E! reality show inside the club.

Having a good time on New Year's Eve doesn't come cheap -- for the bookers.

The average New Year's Eve fee for relevant talent is $100,000," Jack Colton, a Las Vegas nightlife expert and creator of the popular nightlife website JackColton.com, told TheWrap. "An A-List celebrity moves up to $250,000, and for a major grab can go as high as $1 million. Your Lady Gaga's and Jay-Zs would be considered major grabs," Colton said.

"It's a talent arms race, especially in bigger cities," added publicist Melissa Berger, whose clients include frequently booked "Dancing With the Stars" coach Karina Smirnoff.

"It's like 'Who are you' if you don't have someone like Deadmau5 on New Year's Eve," adds talent manager Mike Petolino.

Of course, it's not always about money. For some talent, like Kardashian, it's a question of performing in their favorite place. Breakout DJ and producer Kaskade told TheWrap at November's "Twilight" premiere that his favorite U.S. venue is Marquee (inside Las Vegas' Cosmopolitan). On Saturday night, he'll be commanding $250 a ticket for his performance there.

For other celebs, a highly promoted appearance is a professional calling card to corporate America. "When you go to Vegas, you want to be on the same radar as venues that have Jay-Z hosting the weekend after you," says Berger. "It sets a dynamic, and could even show brands and businesses that the talent is a good fit to be a part of their company."

Then there's the plain old visibility factor. Black Eyed Peas front woman Fergie, to quote one of her own songs, "just can't get enough." After a 2011 that included monster promotional appearances on the Super Bowl halftime show, "American Idol" and countless award shows, Fergie takes on one last gig as she opens the Las Vegas outpost of 1 OAK at the Mirage. In a two-for-one booking, husband Josh Duhamel is expected by her side.

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Across the strip, Axl Rose and the latest incarnation of Guns 'N Roses will play the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino.

And coasting on his "Dancing With the Stars" fame, brother Rob Kardashian hosts at Tryst inside the Wynn, with ticket prices starting $175, lower than his sister's $225 opening price at TAO.

Even those who cover celebrity news are cashing in.

"Extra" host Mario Lopez plays hooky from L.A. outdoor mall "The Grove" (where he tapes "Extra") to headline "Big Bang NYE" at another outdoor mall complex, Hollywood and Highland.

Tom Cruise's son Connor, who's recently started accepting publicity heavy red carpet gigs as "DJ C-Squared," is a late addition to the performing talent at that L.A. bash.

As for the party patrons who shell out for the experience, it comes down to the Facebook effect -- sharing the experience in real-time or the day after online, a promotional windfall for all involved. "Even a picture from a distance or to hear a celeb you see in magazines speaking on the microphone, you can say 'I was there!"' says Berger.

Copyright 2011 by TheWrap.com

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45828574/ns/today-entertainment/

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Japan opts for Lockheed Martin's F-35

Japan's Ministry of Defense has chosen Lockheed Martin's fifth-generation fighter F-35 Lightning II as its next-generation fighter aircraft.

The F-35 beat rivals Boeing F/A-18 Super Hornet and the European-made Eurofighter to replace the air force's aging F-4 fighters.

The purchase, estimated at around $7 billion for 42 planes, will be a welcome boost to the fortunes of Lockheed Martin and a welcome addition to Japan's armory during uncertain regional political times.

Tokyo's decision comes as the region considers the repercussions of the death this week of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il. His authority passes to his youngest son, Kim Jong Un, who remains little known by Western governments.

Although he has a high military rank, the younger Kim's attitudes and relations with the military are unclear. There is much speculation about how much authority he will have over the military in a country suspected of having nuclear capabilities.

Some nuclear analysts suspect Pyongyang may have enough plutonium to arm about a dozen weapons.

"The security environment surrounding future fighter jets is transforming," Japanese Defense Minister Yasuo Ichikawa said. "The F-35 has capabilities that can firmly respond to the changes."

The decision was formally made at the Security Council of Japan, led by Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, as well as at a meeting of Noda's Cabinet, a report by Kyodo news agency said.

''Over the future, we want our aircraft to be equipped with qualities that can deal properly with the various changes facing our security environment,'' Ichikawa said.

The F-35A conventional takeoff and landing variant was offered by the U.S. government with participation from Lockheed Martin. The initial contract will be for four jets delivered sometime in Japan's fiscal year, which starts in April, a statement from Lockheed Martin said.

"We are honored by the confidence the Japanese government has placed in the F-35 and our industry team to deliver this fifth-generation fighter to the Japan (air force)," Bob Stevens, Lockheed Martin chairman and chief executive officer, said. "This announcement begins a new chapter in our long-standing partnership with Japanese industry and builds on the strong security cooperation between the United States and Japan."

The F-35 program has nine partner nations -- the United States, United Kingdom, Italy, Netherlands, Turkey, Canada, Australia, Denmark and Norway.

Japan isn't a partner nation but Lockheed is offering final assembly work in-country as well as some component and sub-component assembly. Japanese firms Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and IHI Corp. will participate in the production of the F-35. IHI is a maker of ships, aero-engines and turbochargers.

The United States intends to buy more than 2,440 of the F-35 planes at an estimated cost of $323 billion, making it the most expensive defense program in U.S. history.

Lockheed said the United Kingdom and Netherlands have ordered test aircraft and Italy and Australia have committed long-lead funding for their initial operational aircraft.

In October 2010, Israel selected the F-35A as the Israel air force's next generation fighter and is scheduled to receive the F-35 through the U.S. government's Foreign Military Sales process.

Source: http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Japan_opts_for_Lockheed_Martins_F-35_999.html

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Crosby still out as Pens host Jagr, Flyers (AP)

PITTSBURGH ? When Jaromir Jagr chose to sign with the Philadelphia Flyers over the summer after a three-year sabbatical, the 39-year-old Russian knew it wouldn't go over well in Pittsburgh.

And to be honest, he doesn't care.

Jagr will make his first appearance in Pittsburgh since his return to the league following a three-year absence on Thursday when the Penguins host the Flyers. He understands there will be some animosity. He also doesn't care.

"To me, it doesn't matter," Jagr said. "I just play every game the same -- Pittsburgh, Rangers, Tampa Bay. It doesn't matter."

Yet he knows he'll hear it from the Consol Energy Center crowd. It's to be expected considering the way he toyed with the Penguins in the offseason. Jagr hinted over the summer that he'd be interested in returning to the city where he won a pair of Stanley Cups alongside Mario Lemieux two decades ago. Yet he joined the hated Flyers instead, in part because the Flyers offered more money.

Pittsburgh coach Dan Bylsma was intrigued about the possibility of pairing Jagr and star Sidney Crosby. Instead Crosby remains sidelined with concussion-like symptoms while Jagr is playing as if he never left the NHL. Jagr enters the game with 30 points (11 goals, 19 assists) in 31 games for Philadelphia.

Bylsma is curious to see how Jagr is received, but isn't exactly expecting Jagr to be rattled.

"It's not the first time that Jaromir Jagr has come into a building and not been liked," Bylsma said. "I'm sure he's going to expect it and hear it. You hear players who hear the crowd and feed off it as well."

Jagr isn't the only former Penguin to trade black-and-yellow for the Flyers' orange-and-white. Winger Max Talbot, a popular figure who helped the Penguins win the 2009 Stanley Cup, left as a free agent over the summer to join Philadelphia.

The venom for Talbot, however, will likely be muted compared to the welcome awaiting Jagr.

Don't expect Jagr to try do something extra to quiet things down.

"That would be the worst thing ... to show somebody you still have it," Jagr said. "I don't to prove anything to anybody; I don't think I'd be playing my game if I wanted to show somebody."

The Penguins have certainly seen enough.

"We see a lot of highlights," Bylsma said. "You what he's been able to do for their (power play). What he's been able to do for (Claude) Giroux has been very good. Those are a lot of things they've saw him doing with our team with a (Evgeni) Malkin and a Crosby."

Instead the Penguins will face their two old friends without Crosby, who hasn't played since Dec. 5 after having a recurrence of concussion-like symptoms. Bylsma said Wednesday that his 24-year-old captain is going through "light exercise" but remains sidelined indefinitely.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_on_sp_ho_ne/hkn_penguins_old_faces

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

US warns Iran against closing key oil passage

(AP) ? The U.S. warned Iran on Wednesday it will not tolerate any disruption of traffic through the Strait of Hormuz after Iran threatened to choke off the vital Persian Gulf oil transport route if Washington imposes sanctions targeting its crude exports.

The increasingly heated exchange raises new tensions in a standoff that has the potential to spark military reprisals and propel oil prices to levels that could batter a global economy already grappling with a European debt crisis.

Iran's navy chief boasted Wednesday that it would be "very easy" for his country's forces to close the strategic Strait of Hormuz, the passage at the mouth of the Persian Gulf through which a sixth of the world's oil passes daily. It was the second such threat in two days following a warning by Iran's vice president that Tehran was close

"Iran has comprehensive control over the strategic waterway," Adm. Habibollah Sayyari told state-run Press TV, as the country was in the midst of a 10-day military drill near the strategic waterway.

The comments drew a quick response from the U.S.

"This is not just an important issue for security and stability in the region, but is an economic lifeline for countries in the Gulf, to include Iran," Pentagon press secretary George Little said. "Interference with the transit or passage of vessels through the Strait of Hormuz will not be tolerated."

Separately, Bahrain-based U.S. Navy 5th Fleet spokeswoman said the Navy is "always ready to counter malevolent actions to ensure freedom of navigation."

Iran's threat to seal off the Gulf, surrounded by oil-rich Gulf states, underlines the depth of worry over the prospect that the Obama administration will go ahead with sanctions over its nuclear program that would severely hit its biggest revenue earner, oil. The sanctions themselves have raised worries that removing Iran's crude from the market will lead to a spike in oil prices.

Gulf Arab nations appeared ready to at least ease market tensions. A senior Saudi Arabian oil official told the AP that Gulf Arab nations are ready to step in to offset any potential loss of exports from Iran, which is the world's fourth largest oil producer. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to comment on the issue.

Saudi Arabia, which has been producing about 10 million barrels per day, has an overall production capacity of over 12 million barrels per day and is widely seen as the only OPEC member with sufficient spare capacity to offset major shortages. But Iran ? the world's fourth largest producer ? pumps about 4 million barrels per day, meaning that other Gulf states would also have to up their output to offset the decline.

What remains unclear is what routes the Gulf nations could take to bring that production to market if Iran goes through with its threats.

About 15 million barrels per day pass through the Hormuz Strait, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. There are some pipelines that could be tapped, but Gulf oil leaders, who met in Cairo on Dec. 24, declined to say whether they had discussed alternate routes or what they may be.

The Saudi comment, however, appeared to allay some concerns. The U.S. benchmark crude futures contract fell 77 cents in early morning trade on the New York Mercantile Exchange, but still hovered above $100 per barrel.

U.S. State Department spokesman Mark Toner played down the Iranian threats as "rhetoric," saying, "We've seen these kinds of comments before."

While many analysts believe that Iran's warnings are little more than posturing, they still highlight both the delicate nature of the oil market, which moves as much on rhetoric as supply and demand fundamentals.

Iran relies on crude sales for about 80 percent of its of its public revenues, and sanctions or an even pre-emptive measure by Tehran to withhold its crude from the market would already batter its flailing economy.

IHS Global Insight analyst Richard Cochrane said in a report issued Wednesday that markets are "jittery over the possibility" of Iran's blockading the strait. But, he said, "such action would also damage Iran's economy, and risk retaliation from the U.S. and allies that could further escalate instability in the region."

"Accordingly, it is not likely to be a decision that the Iranian leadership will take lightly," he said.

Earlier sanctions that have targeted the oil and financial sector have added new pressures to the country's already struggling economy. Government cuts in subsidies on key goods like food and energy have angered Iranians, stoking inflation while the country's currency is steadily depreciating.

The impetus behind the subsidies cut plan pushed through parliament by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was to reduce budget costs and would pass money directly to the poor to pay for their needs. But critics have pointed to it as another in a series of bad policy moves by the hardline president.

So far, Western nations have been unable to agree on sanctions targeting oil exports, even as they argue that Iran is trying to develop a nuclear weapon. Tehran maintains its nuclear program ? already the subject of several rounds of sanctions ? is purely peaceful.

The U.S. Congress has passed a bill banning dealings with the Iran Central Bank, a move that would heavily hurt Iran's ability to export crude. The bill could impose penalties on foreign firms that do business with Iran's central bank. European and Asian nations use the bank for transactions to import Iranian oil.

President Barack Obama has said he will sign the bill despite his misgivings. China and Russia have opposed such measures. A likely result of the sanctions would be that oil prices would at least temporarily spike to levels that could weigh heavily on the world economy.

Closing the Strait of Hormuz would hit even harder. Energy consultant and trader The Schork Group estimated in a report that crude would jump to above $140 per barrel. Conservatives in Iran claim global oil prices will jump to $250 a barrel should the waterway be closed.

By closing the strait, Iran may aim to send the message that its pain from sanctions will also be felt by others. But it has equally compelling reasons not to try.

The move would put the country's hardline regime straight in the cross-hairs of the world, including those nations that have so far been relative allies. Much of Iran's crude goes to Europe and to Asia.

"Shutting down the strait ... is the last bullet that Iran has and therefore we have to express some doubt that they would do this and at the same time lose their support from China and Russia," said analyst Olivier Jakob of Petromatrix in Switzerland.

Iran has adopted an aggressive military posture in recent months in response to increasing threats from the U.S. and Israel of possible military action to stop Iran's nuclear program.

The Iranian navy's exercises, which began on Saturday, involve submarines, missile drills, torpedoes and drones. A senior Iranian commander said Wednesday that the country's navy is also planning to test advanced missiles and "smart" torpedoes during the maneuvers.

The war games cover a 1,250-mile (2,000-kilometer) stretch of sea off the Strait of Hormuz, northern parts of the Indian Ocean and into the Gulf of Aden near the entrance to the Red Sea as a show of strength and could bring Iranian ships into proximity with U.S. Navy vessels in the area.

Moderate news website, irdiplomacy.ir, says the war games are intended to send a message to the West that Iran is capable of sealing off the waterway.

"The war games ... are a warning to the West that should oil and central bank sanctions be stepped up, (Iran) is able to cut the lifeblood of the West and Arabs," it said, adding that the West "should regard the maneuvers as a direct message."

___

El-Tablawy reported from Cairo. Associated Press writers Adam Schreck in Dubai and Abdullah Shihri in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, contributed.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-28-ML-Iran-Oil/id-d6eb8f35aa0542bb9d049cd236560a6a

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Sanchez, Gazit-Globe fail to impress on debut (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Gazit-Globe and Sanchez Energy opened to a muted response on their trading debut, as companies without the dotcom tag find little favor with investors.

IPOs of internet companies such as Groupon Inc, Angie's List Inc and Jive Software Inc had flying starts to their listings, while those of brick-and-mortar companies haven't managed to generate comparable investor interest.

Earlier in the day, Luxfer Holdings, a maker of high-performance materials and gas cylinders, postponed its offering citing market conditions.

On Wednesday, shares of Sanchez, a developer of unconventional oil and natural gas assets, closed at $18.25, down 17 percent from their issue price of $22, after the company priced its IPO below its price range.

Last week, energy companies Rose Rock Midstream LP and Memorial Production Partners LP had also met with cold response from investors. While Texas-based Memorial Production closed a percent down from the $19 offer price, Rose Rock shares closed flat.

"These companies (energy) were trying to get more proceeds to benefit themselves rather than leaving a lot of money on table to benefit investors," Jay Ritter, finance professor at University of Florida told Reuters.

Sanchez's offering raised net proceeds of about $203 million, which it intends to use to fund capital expenditures through December 2012.

Sanchez, which mainly focuses on the Eagle Ford Shale, said it earned $3.4 million for nine months ended September 30, compared with a net loss of $3.1 million last year. For the period, its revenue was $9.9 million, compared with $1.5 million last year.

Israeli real estate investment firm Gazit-Globe, which cut its U.S. offering size by a quarter, closed at $8.83, 1.8 percent below the $9 offer price on Wednesday.

Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C. and Macquarie Capital were the lead underwriters for Sanchez's offering, while Citigroup and Deutsche Bank Securities underwrote the Gazit-Globe offering.

(Reporting by Eileen Anupa Soreng and Sharanya Hrishikesh in Bangalore; Editing by Joyjeet Das and Sreejiraj Eluvangal)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111214/wr_nm/us_gazitglobe

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Man who posed as Joplin tornado victim pleads guilty (Reuters)

KANSAS CITY, Mo (Reuters) ? A man who passed more than $160,000 in checks by claiming to be a victim of the May 22 tornado in Joplin, Mo., pleaded guilty to federal fraud charges on Tuesday.

Justin R. Compton, 31, wrote 225 checks at dozens of businesses in the Joplin region, according to court documents filed in conjunction with his guilty plea in Springfield, Missouri. Compton, of Springfield, convinced businesses to take the checks by saying he was a U.S. Army sergeant affected by the tornado, according to the federal court documents.

Compton opened a bank account in Ozark, Missouri but never deposited any money into the fund, the charges state. He admitted writing a total of $160,672 in checks.

The tornado in Joplin destroyed more than 9,000 buildings and took 161 lives. It generated an outpouring of donations and volunteer time from thousands of people around the country, but officials have been watching for fraud, said Lynn Onstot, a spokesperson for the city.

"The tornado has brought out the best in most people, but unfortunately there are some who try to capitalize on disasters, and that's what makes it sad," Onstot said.

Compton faces up to 30 years in prison without parole, a fine of up to $1 million and restitution, authorities said.

(Writing and reporting by Kevin Murphy; Editing by Mary Wisniewski and Greg McCune)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weather/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111206/us_nm/us_crime_tornado

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Obama embracing Roosevelt's middle-class appeal (AP)

WASHINGTON ? President Barack Obama is channeling President Theodore Roosevelt, embracing a mantle of economic fairness for the nation's middle class Tuesday that draws parallels to the progressive reformer's calls for a "square deal" for regular Americans more than a century ago.

Obama intends to use a speech in small town Osawatomie, Kan. ? where Roosevelt delivered his "New Nationalism" address in 1910 ? to lay out economic themes of giving middle-class workers a fair shake and greater financial security, concepts the president will probably return to repeatedly during the 2012 campaign.

Only a month before Republican voters begin choosing a presidential nominee, the White House said Obama would describe this as a "make-or-break moment" for the middle class and those hoping to join it that demands balance and rules of the road to help strengthen working families.

"Now is not the time to slam on the brakes. Now is the time to step on the gas," Obama said Monday at the White House. "Now is the time to keep growing the economy, to keep creating jobs, to keep giving working Americans the boost that they need."

Obama is pressuring Congress to support an extension of a payroll tax cut that the White House says will give a $1,000 tax cut to a typical family earning $50,000 a year. The president is coupling that with efforts to renew a program of extended unemployment benefits set to expire Dec. 31.

Republicans and Democrats in Congress said a holiday-season package was beginning to take shape that would cost $180 billion or more over a decade. It would include not only the payroll tax cut and unemployment benefit renewals, but also a provision to avert a threatened 27 percent reduction in fees to doctors who treat Medicare patients.

House Republicans are developing legislation to extend an existing pay freeze for federal workers as partial payment for the tax cut and unemployment benefits. Other cost-savers are expected to include a proposal Obama advanced earlier this year to raise pension costs for federal employees, officials said. The bill may also include another presidential recommendation, this one for a surcharge on Medigap policies purchased by future Medicare recipients.

One of Obama's main Republican rivals, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, said Monday in a radio interview that he would like to see the payroll tax cut extended "because I know that working families are really feeling the pinch right now."

The president will be speaking at a high school about 50 miles southwest of Kansas City, not far from the presidential electoral prize of Missouri, which Obama narrowly lost to Republican John McCain in 2008. Obama is expected to compete feverishly for several Midwestern states that could hold the key to his re-election prospects.

In Kansas, Obama plans to show that the economic struggles many Americans currently face are similar to the conditions when Roosevelt spoke in Osawatomie on Aug. 31, 1910, about a year after he left the White House. Roosevelt declared in the speech that he stood for a "square deal," which he said did not only mean "fair play under the present rules of the games, but that I stand for having those rules changed so as to work for a more substantial equality of opportunity and of reward for equally good service."

Republicans noted that Roosevelt also used the speech to denounce broken promises in politics, saying Obama had fallen short of rebuilding the economy, reducing the debt and curtailing special interests. Republican National Committee spokeswoman Kirsten Kukowski said the president was "desperately trying new slogans and messages to see what sticks because he can't figure out how to sell his last three years of high unemployment and more debt."

Obama has frequently turned to former presidents ? many Republicans ? to offer examples of why Congress should support his agenda.

In September, he said Republican Presidents George W. Bush and Ronald Reagan understood the importance of immigration and argued the country lacked "that kind of leadership coming from the Republican Party."

Last week, the president told donors in New York that as a nation, "we all must have a stake in each other's success." He reminded supporters that President Abraham Lincoln launched the Transcontinental Railroad, the National Academy of Sciences and the first land-grant colleges while Theodore Roosevelt called for a progressive income tax.

Obama said President Dwight Eisenhower, a Kansas native, built the Interstate Highway System while Republicans worked with President Franklin Delano Roosevelt to give "millions of returning heroes, including my grandfather, the chance to go to college on the G.I. Bill."

"Our politics may be divided, but most Americans still understand we will stand or fall together," he said in New York.

___

Follow Ken Thomas on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/AP_Ken_Thomas

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111206/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama

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Monday, December 5, 2011

Calif. residents grapple with windstorm cleanup

Crews from Southern California Edison power company work to clean up and restore power on Live Oak Avenue, Friday, Dec. 2, 2011, in Temple City, Calif. With more than 100,000 people still without power Friday from one of the biggest windstorms to hit the Western United States in years, people began cutting up felled trees, hauling away trash and firing up power generators. Particularly hard hit was the Los Angeles suburb of Temple City, where winds toppled telephone poles like dominos, leaving three-quarters of the city's 35,000 residents without power for several days. (AP Photo/Bret Hartman)

Crews from Southern California Edison power company work to clean up and restore power on Live Oak Avenue, Friday, Dec. 2, 2011, in Temple City, Calif. With more than 100,000 people still without power Friday from one of the biggest windstorms to hit the Western United States in years, people began cutting up felled trees, hauling away trash and firing up power generators. Particularly hard hit was the Los Angeles suburb of Temple City, where winds toppled telephone poles like dominos, leaving three-quarters of the city's 35,000 residents without power for several days. (AP Photo/Bret Hartman)

Julian Francis, 7, of Pasadena, stands next to a fallen tree, caused by the Santa Ana winds, near the intersection of East Mountain Street and North Hill Avenue, Friday, Dec. 2, 2011, in Pasadena, Calif. On Friday hundreds of thousands of people remained without power in Southern California and crews struggled to clean up smashed trees, toppled power lines and debris-strewn roadways. (AP Photo/Bret Hartman)

Crews from Southern California Edison power company work to clean up and restore power on Live Oak Avenue, Friday, Dec. 2, 2011, in Temple City, Calif. With more than 100,000 people still without power Friday from one of the biggest windstorms to hit the Western United States in years, people began cutting up felled trees, hauling away trash and firing up power generators. Particularly hard hit was the Los Angeles suburb of Temple City, where winds toppled telephone poles like dominos, leaving three-quarters of the city's 35,000 residents without power for several days. (AP Photo/Bret Hartman)

Crews from Southern California Edison power company work to clean up and restore power on Live Oak Avenue, Friday, Dec. 2, 2011, in Temple City, Calif. With more than 100,000 people still without power Friday from one of the biggest windstorms to hit the Western United States in years, people began cutting up felled trees, hauling away trash and firing up power generators. Particularly hard hit was the Los Angeles suburb of Temple City, where winds toppled telephone poles like dominos, leaving three-quarters of the city's 35,000 residents without power for several days. (AP Photo/Bret Hartman)

Crews work to clean up and restore power on Live Oak Avenue, Friday, Dec. 2, 2011, in Temple City, Calif. With more than 100,000 people still without power Friday from one of the biggest windstorms to hit the Western United States in years, people began cutting up felled trees, hauling away trash and firing up power generators. Particularly hard hit was the Los Angeles suburb of Temple City, where winds toppled telephone poles like dominos, leaving three-quarters of the city's 35,000 residents without power for several days. (AP Photo/Bret Hartman)

TEMPLE CITY, Calif. (AP) ? As the hurricane-force winds that pummeled the West eased Friday, Diane Johnson stood knee high in leaves and branches, surveying a fallen tree trunk at eye level and trying to decide just how to begin the big cleanup.

A near century-old eucalyptus tree toppled over in the middle of the night, crushing all three of the family's cars, landing at the doorstep of their Southern California home and blocking any view from their windows.

Trapped inside for hours, they were able to get out when the fire department cut them a small pathway.

"I have no idea what to do," she said. "I don't know. I don't know."

Like hundreds of thousands of people in Southern California on Friday, Johnson was without electricity. And just like Johnson, residents and crews struggled to clean up smashed trees, toppled power lines and debris-strewn roadways.

Several cities in the region, the hardest hit from Wednesday night's windstorms, were still in a state of emergency.

Schools in Pasadena and more than a dozen others in the Los Angeles Unified School District remained closed Friday.

California Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson said in a statement Friday that schools closed because of wind damage would still receive state funding.

"I want to assure school districts that they will not lose funding if their facilities are closed or used as emergency shelters during this disaster," Torlakson said.

In Temple City, the Los Angeles suburb where Johnson lives, a row of toppled power poles with wires attached blocked a street. The city's main street remained a shuttered ghost town as cars inched past darkened stop lights and shop signs in Chinese.

Seventy-five percent of the city remained without power. As residents in some parts were being advised to boil water or use bottled water, others began tossing out the food in their increasingly pungent refrigerators. As many as 200 trees fell in the storms.

As the night loomed, police increased patrols and the city handed out free flashlights.

During the day, residents began cleaning up, filling trash bags with leaves and branches. Streets with older, larger trees suffered the worst damage as top-heavy trunks fell over. But many homes were spared, including that of Johnson's next-door neighbor, Margaret Mushinskie.

The trimmed lawn at Mushinskie's house was pristine because her husband won a years-long battle with the city to cut down the two eucalyptus trees in front of their home.

"They need to come down," she said, expressing concern for Johnson's son who worked two jobs for his red sports car that now sat crushed under a pile of leaves. "Those poor people. He was so proud of his car. Bless his heart."

In the adjacent city of Arcadia, Aubreann Loving stood in the front yard of her home, watching one car after another turn onto her tiny cul-de-sac, unable to continue down a major cross street that had been blocked by a gigantic fallen tree.

Another tree crashed into her backyard, demolishing the yard's back wall.

The 15-year-old high school sophomore was at home with her family in a house with no heat or light and a refrigerator filled with spoiling food after the city's school district canceled classes at all 10 of its campuses for a second day.

Loving, who passed time Friday watching videos on a portable DVD player she had recharged at a friend's home, is no stranger to school furloughs, having taken her share of snow days off in her native Iowa.

But this, she complained, was far more monotonous.

"If the power would go off, it would come back on within a few hours," she said of elementary school days in Iowa. "But the power isn't coming back on right away here, so it's like there's nothing to do."

About 150,000 people in Southern California, more than 18,000 along California's Central Coast and thousands more in Utah ? where Thursday winds topped 100 mph ? remained without electricity. Authorities said some areas might not have power restored until Sunday.

In Pasadena, among the hardest hit cities in the region, inspectors were checking more than 100 damaged buildings to see if they should be red-tagged as being too dangerous to inhabit.

One 42-unit apartment building and other structures were red-tagged Thursday and 13 more were yellow-tagged, allowing only limited access, said Lisa Derderian, the city's emergency management coordinator.

"Every street in Pasadena was impacted in one way or another," she said, adding that the city's cleanup would be expeditious. "We have the (Tournament of Roses) parade every year here so we are experts in cleanup and debris removal."

In Northern California, authorities said a wildlife biologist working in a Big Sur redwood forest was killed when a tree fell in heavy winds. Monterey County Coroner Detective Diana Schumacher told KSBW-TV that California condor biologist Michael Tyner died after the tree fell on him Wednesday afternoon.

Meanwhile, crews Friday battled wildfires that were sparked by power lines blown down by the wind. The winds were blamed for the destruction of at least four homes.

Aiding firefighters and those involved in the cleanup was the fact that the high winds, which had been expected to return Thursday night, never materialized. Around the state, the 60- to 80-mph gusts of the previous day had become mere breezes.

The low-pressure system that had spawned the winds was moving eastward so quickly that the National Weather Service canceled red flag warnings that predicted extreme fire danger from the gusty, dry weather.

A new system was expected to move into Arizona on Friday night, bringing a chance of more winds over the weekend, but the gusts will not be as strong, weather service meteorologist Eric Boldt said.

Nevada could get 35-mph sustained winds with gusts to 70 mph, while Wyoming and Utah could see light snow, and New Mexico was warned to expect heavier snow and freezing drizzle.

___

Associated Press writers John Rogers and Alicia Chang in Los Angeles, Jennifer Dobner in Salt Lake City, Sudhin Thanawala in San Francisco and Oskar Garcia in Las Vegas contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-12-03-Western%20Winds/id-7ad99afe601f4fe29f8c4a2d67637a46

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

Pets Alive in NY Partners with Santa to Promote Christmas ...

December 2, 2011

You know how sometimes there?s an idea that starts out good but then it snowballs into a dirty blob?? For example, it?s a good idea to spread the word about keeping your cats indoors on Halloween.? There are all sorts of comings and goings, kids traipsing around the neighborhood at night and yes ? there is a tiny minority of people who are going to do tricks instead of treats and you don?t want your cat to be used in someone?s idea of a prank.? Somehow this good idea got dirty blobbed into ?shelters and rescue groups must not adopt out black cats near Halloween because Satanists want to sacrifice them in bloody rituals?.

Another one surrounds the notion that people should be aware of the responsibilities of pet ownership and avoid giving a pet as a Christmas gift to someone who might not want a pet or who might be allergic, or who might be under the impression that it?s fine if they aren?t home for 12 hours a day because a puppy can wait until they get home for a potty break.? This is a good, common sense message to promote.? But over time, this one got dirty blobbed into ?shelters and rescue groups must not adopt out pets as Christmas gifts because the only people who would get a pet as a Christmas gift are those who will put him on a chain in the backyard on December 26 and leave him there until the day he dies?.

Any policy which denies a home to a shelter pet based on arbitrary criteria such as ?It?s Halloween? or ?The pet will be given as a Christmas gift? needs to be dirty blobbed into oblivion.? As long as you are conducting your normal, common sense screening of adopters and asking the appropriate questions in order to ensure a potentially good match, it shouldn?t matter whether it?s a holiday or not.

It?s understandable that shelters and rescues want to avoid so-called impulse adoptions which might not be a good fit.? That?s why the normal screening process of applicants is important ? to weed out those negative impulses which by the way, can occur at any time of the year.? It?s good to remember too, as Bonney Brown pointed out in her seminar at the No Kill Conference this year, that people can have positive impulses.? Running into a burning building to save a baby is a positive impulse.

I was glad to see that Pets Alive in NY is offering to make adopting a pet as a Christmas gift easy and fun ? in a very responsible way:

If you are a parent and you have already told Santa it is ok for your children to receive a pet this holiday season all you need to do is fill out our application, get approved, come down and select your pet (within a week of the holiday). Pets Alive will tell Santa and we will drive up to your house on Christmas morning, (with the Pets Alive MAGIC BUS) and knock on your door.

DING DONG!
::door opens, little boy looks up. There we stand in Santa hat, with clipboard, big MAGIC BUS behind us::

Us: ?Hello, is this the house of Susie and Timmy So-and-So??

Little Boy:
?Yes. This is. I am Timmy So-and-So?.

Us: ?Well, Timmy, get your sister, because we have a very special delivery from Santa for the two of you!!?

::We turn, whistle and out of the bus comes Santa?s Elf with Fido!! ::

Us: ?Timmy and Susie ? Santa asked us to take care of your new dog, Fido. He stopped by Pets Alive so that Fido didn?t sit under the tree in a box all night! He asked us to deliver him to you this morning! Merry Christmas Timmy and Susie from Santa and Pets Alive! ?.. and Merry Christmas to YOU , Fido, for you my sweet little furry friend, have finally ?found your forever home!?

I love this idea.? Every year some parents are going to give the kids the pet they?ve been asking for as a Christmas gift.? If shelters and rescues refuse to allow adoptions of pets as holiday gifts, they are driving parents to alternate sources to buy the pet ? and probably turning them off shelter adoption permanently.? Pets Alive is employing their normal screening practices to ensure a good potential match between pet and family and making it easy for the parent to save a life while giving the kids the present of their dreams.? No pet store salesman or flea market vendor is going to hold your pet for you until Christmas morning and then show up in a Santa hat ? but Pets Alive will!

Good on you Pets Alive for thinking outside the box.? I would love to see this idea catch on with other shelters and rescue groups.? Some number of responsible people are going to give pets as Christmas gifts this year.? Refusing to allow adoptions at Christmas will not change that fact but it will deny the pets in your shelter a chance at a good home.? Why not consider each applicant on their individual merits and see if breaking the mold can get more of your pets into homes this holiday season?

?

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Source: http://yesbiscuit.wordpress.com/2011/12/02/pets-alive-in-ny-partners-with-santa-to-promote-christmas-adoptions/

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Schooling Capitalism (Prospect)

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

Israel defense chief: Iran sanctions won't work (AP)

JERUSALEM ? Israel's defense minister says Israel has no desire to go to war with Iran over its nuclear program but warns that at some point there may be no other option.

Ehud Barak says Israel "would be very glad" if sanctions and diplomacy would lead Iran to abandon its suspected nuclear weapons program but that he doesn't think that will happen.

Barak told Israel Radio on Thursday that Israel doesn't wish to fight unnecessary wars, but "definitely we might be forced" to act.

Israel, like the West, is convinced Iran is developing a nuclear bomb. It says a nuclear-armed Iran would be an existential threat, citing Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's calls for Israel's destruction.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111201/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_israel_iran

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Meeting with wife may be key to future of Cain bid (AP)

MANCHESTER, N.H. ? He's plotting an aggressive campaign schedule across several states, but Herman Cain has begun to outline a possible exit strategy from the race for the Republican presidential nomination.

The former business executive, facing a woman's allegation of a 13-year extramarital affair, says a heavy emotional toll on his family ? particularly his wife, Gloria, who he has not seen since the charge surfaced ? could force him to call it quits. The shift comes as a growing chorus of would-be allies suggests he is no longer a viable presidential contender and Cain himself says fundraising has suffered.

Cain, a top-tier candidate just weeks ago, says he'll decide in the next "few days" whether to abandon his White House bid, but not before he meets with his wife.

"Since I've been campaigning all week, I haven't had an opportunity to sit down with her and walk through this with my wife and my family. I will do that when I get back home on Friday," Cain told reporters gathered at his New Hampshire campaign headquarters Wednesday night. "I am not going to make a decision until after we talk face to face."

Cain said he had spoken to his wife only by phone since Monday, the day an Atlanta television station reported the woman's accusation. Since then, aides have crafted a packed campaign schedule with stops in Ohio, New Hampshire, Tennessee, South Carolina and Georgia and prepared to launch a fresh round of TV ads in Iowa.

Cain was to sit down Thursday afternoon with the New Hampshire Union Leader, an influential conservative voice in the first-in-the-nation primary state. This evening the former pizza executive is scheduled to deliver a business-focused speech at Middle Tennessee State University.

"There were some people who thought that I was finished," Cain said Wednesday night. "But I'm going to leave it with Yogi Berra's comment: `It ain't over till it's over.' And it ain't over yet."

Many Republican operatives believe Cain's bid is over whether he pulls the plug or not.

"I don't see how they walk away from the damage that's been done and emerge as a viable primary candidate," said Rick Wilson, a longtime GOP consultant based in Florida. "All these things about Herman Cain keep coming out drip, drip, drip, and they're not handling it well. And now conservative Republicans have another place to go: Newt Gingrich."

Dan McLagan, a veteran GOP strategist based in Atlanta, said Cain "is like a zombie at this point: He's dead but he does not appear to have noticed and has kept on walking."

"His support is all moving to Gingrich and, at some point, he's going to look back and see that he is grand marshal of a one-man parade," McLagan said.

Gingrich has been the beneficiary ? in polls, at least ? of Cain's slide in the month since it was disclosed that the National Restaurant Association paid settlements to two women who claimed Cain sexually harassed them while he was its president. A third woman told The Associated Press that Cain made inappropriate sexual advances but that she didn't file a complaint. A fourth woman also stepped forward to accuse Cain of groping her in a car in 1997.

Cain has denied wrongdoing in all cases.

Atlanta-area businesswoman Ginger White, 46, said her affair with Cain ended this year before he became a White House candidate. He has denied any such affair, and in a letter addressed to "patriots and supporters" called her allegations "completely false" and labeled her "troubled."

"It's very disappointing that he would call me troubled and, you know, it's unfortunate," White said Wednesday on ABC's "Good Morning America."

Top aides huddled privately Wednesday to map out a strategy to get past the allegations. He has told his top supporters that his campaign must determine whether he will have the financial and grassroots support to move ahead.

"The day that this latest one hit, fundraising went way down," Cain told reporters in New Hampshire. "As the week has gone on and this woman who has made these accusations has basically started to contradict herself, our fundraising has started to go back up. It's not up to the level where it was, but a lot of people are saying, you know what, they don't believe it."

In New Hampshire and at other campaign stops this week, he renewed what has become a familiar defense: that he is the victim of attacks by liberals and the establishment, who are threatened by his outsider appeal.

"They want you to believe that with another character assassination on me that I will drop out," a defiant Cain told a crowd of about 200 Wednesday in Dayton, Ohio. Some responded with shouts of "No!" and "Boo!"

In Iowa, Cain's state chairman, Steve Grubbs, said he was preparing a busy December schedule beginning with a Dec. 10 debate in Des Moines. And Grubbs said Cain, who has not aired any campaign ads in Iowa since last week, will resume advertising Friday with a new spot that asserts that electing Cain would put a veteran CEO in the White House, not a politician.

"His campaign is strong enough to survive the allegations," said Michael Farren, 31, an Ohio State University doctoral student in economics, from Pataskala, Ohio.

___

Associated Press writers Shannon McCaffrey in Atlanta, Ann Sanner in Columbus, Ohio, Tom Beaumont in Des Moines, Iowa, and Kasie Hunt in New York contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111201/ap_on_el_pr/us_cain

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PC gaming help - Crowdsourcing Questions & Answers

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Monday, November 28, 2011

As deadline passes, Occupy Philly protesters calm

Steven Venus fortifies his space at Occupy Philly with wood pallets, Sunday Nov. 27, 2011, in Philadelphia, in defiance of the city?s 5 p.m. Dilworth Plaza eviction order. (AP Photo/ Joseph Kaczmarek)

Steven Venus fortifies his space at Occupy Philly with wood pallets, Sunday Nov. 27, 2011, in Philadelphia, in defiance of the city?s 5 p.m. Dilworth Plaza eviction order. (AP Photo/ Joseph Kaczmarek)

A member of Occupy Philly who identified herself as Laura watches the demonstration at Dilworth Plaza, in Philadelphia, Sunday Nov. 27, 2011, held in defiance of the city?s 5 p.m. eviction order. (AP Photo/ Joseph Kaczmarek)

Police officers watch as members of Occupy Philly demonstrate at Dilworth Plaza, Sunday, Nov. 27, 2011, in Philadelphia, in defiance of the city?s 5 p.m. eviction order. (AP Photo/Joseph Kaczmarek)

Members of Occupy Philly, from right to left, Shawn Grant, Brianne Murphy, and Diane Isser, demonstrate at Dilworth Plaza, in Philadelphia, on Sunday Nov. 27, 2011, in defiance of the city?s 5 p.m. eviction order. (AP Photo/ Joseph Kaczmarek)

Jeff Rousset holds a sign during a demonstration by Occupy Philly, at Dilworth Plaza, in Philadelphia, Sunday Nov. 27, 2011, in defiance of the city?s 5 p.m. eviction order. A deadline set by the city for Occupy Philadelphia to leave the site where it has camped for some two months passed without scuffles or arrests as police watched nearly 50 demonstrators lock arms and sit at the entrance of Dilworth Plaza. (AP Photo/ Joseph Kaczmarek)

PHILADELPHIA (AP) ? A deadline set by the city for Occupy Philadelphia to leave the site where it has camped for nearly two months passed Sunday without any arrests.

As police kept watch, protesters sang and spoke of their dreams ? while some prepared for the possibility of arrest.

The scene outside City Hall was quiet most of the day and by early Monday the numbers of protesters ? and police officers ? had decreased. The sound of protesters' drumming brought complaints from several people living in nearby high-rise apartment buildings, but the drummers declined to stop.

Occupy Philadelphia was far different from encampments in other cities where pepper spray, tear gas and police action resulted in the removal of long-situated demonstrators since the movement against economic disparity and perceived corporate greed began with Occupy Wall Street in Manhattan two months ago.

Unlike Sunday's arrests in Maine, Philadelphia's protesters have managed to avoid aggressive confrontations so far. By early Monday there was still hope the City of Brotherly Love would continue to be largely violence-free.

Along the steps leading into a plaza, about 50 people sat in lines Sunday with the promise that they would not leave unless they were carried out by authorities. For a time, they linked arms. But as it seemed that a forceful ouster was not imminent, they relaxed a bit. A police presence was heavier than usual but no orders to leave had been issued.

A few dozen tents remained scattered on the plaza, along with trash, piles of dirty blankets and numerous signs reading, "You can't evict an idea."

Several hundred supporters surrounded those who were prepared to face arrest for one of the Occupy movement meetings known as a general assembly.

The meeting started out with logistics ? making sure those sitting in had quarters to make calls from jail and that someone was gathering important medical information ? but it soon turned to big ideas.

The protesters described their many hopes for a better world. Among them: reparations for slavery and Native American lands, better and more inspiring schools, recognizing gay marriage, and end to homelessness, fewer TVs and better pay for artists. Some of those who spoke with hope and joined in rendition of "Lean on Me," had goggles with them, just in case pepper spray is used.

There was a sense that the occupation in front of Philadelphia's Gothic-style City Hall would soon be over, but hope that the movement would last.

"This is just baby steps," said R.W. Dennen, who said he felt a bit guilty that he wasn't preparing to be arrested.

Elsewhere on the East Coast, eight people were arrested in Maine after protesters in the Occupy Augusta encampment in Capitol Park took down their tents and packed their camping gear after being told to get a permit or move their shelters.

Protesters pitched tents Oct. 15 as part of the national movement but said Sunday they shouldn't have to get a permit to exercise their right to assemble. Occupy leaders said a large teepee loaned by the Penobscot Indians and a big all-weather tent would stay up.

The Augusta arrests came when police say people jumped a waist-high, wooden fence on the governor's mansion lawn and some climbed a portico to the building and unfurled an Occupy banner. As many as 50 protesters, some holding signs and beating a drum, gathered near the Blaine House gates.

In Los Angeles, another deadline was getting closer, too, for hundreds of demonstrators to abandon their weeks-old Occupy Los Angeles protest.

Although city officials have told protesters they must leave and take their nearly 500 tents with them by 12:01 a.m. PST Monday, just a handful were seen packing up Sunday.

Instead, some passed out fliers containing the city seal and the words: "By order of Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, this notice terminates your tenancy and requires you to attend the Occupy L.A. Eviction Block Party," which the fliers' said was scheduled for 12:01 a.m.

Villaraigosa said police would not make arrests immediately after the deadline, but would give protesters ample time to leave on their own.

Others attended teach-ins on resistance tactics, including how to stay safe should police begin firing rubber bullets or breaking out tear gas canisters and pepper spray.

Back in Philadelphia, Steve Venus was fortifying the area around his tent with abandoned wood pallets left over from those who had already packed up. He said the $50 million construction project, including a planned ice skating rink, was not a good enough reason for Occupy Philadelphia to leave the plaza.

Venus, 22, said that by enforcing the deadline, the city was essentially telling Occupy supporters "your issues are not important. The only issue that's important is the ice skating rink."

On Friday, Mayor Michael Nutter expressed support for the movement's ideals but said protesters must make room for the long-planned project, which they were told of when they set up camp Oct. 6.

Nutter was out of town Sunday, but his spokesman reiterated that "people are under orders to move."

The mayor himself had an exchange on Twitter with hip-hop impresario Russell Simmons, who asked Nutter "to remember this is a non-violent movement ? please show restraint tonight."

Nutter's response: "I agree."

Members of the governing body of Occupy Philadelphia, the general assembly, previously approved a move to a plaza across the street after union officials stressed the hundreds of jobs being created by the Dilworth reconstruction. But that vote mistakenly assumed protesters would be able to pitch tents there.

Graffiti, lack of sanitation and fire hazards, including smoking in tents, were among the city's chief concerns at Dilworth, which had about 350 tents at the height of the movement. The encampment also attracted significant numbers of homeless, although the plaza had long been frequented by that population even before the camp was established.

The city did issue a permit to an Occupy Philadelphia faction called Reasonable Solutions that planned to continue demonstrating across the street beginning Monday. However, activities are limited to between 9 a.m. and 7 p.m., and no overnight camping is allowed.

___

Associated Press Writers Andrew Dalton in Los Angeles and Glenn Adams in Augusta, Maine, contributed to this story.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-11-28-Occupy-Protests/id-ac5fa9c3bd594e8e95a4c6b8846da017

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