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This week, the Occupy Wall Street spokes council-a recently created decision-making body composed of people from the movement's various working groups-met for the first time; the OWS General Assembly voted to denounce "Jobs for the 99%," a website backed by the energy industry and unions marshalling OWS language against opponents of the Keystone XL pipeline; and a dozen New York occupiers set out on a 300-mile march to Washington, D.C., planning to reach the capital in time for a Super Committee meeting November 23.

In other OWS news across the country:

Thousands participated in Bank Transfer Day on November 5, closing their accounts with big banks in favor of local credit unions.



Atlanta occupiers camped out on a lawn to defend a family (including a cop) from foreclosure.



During a statewide "Occupy Cal" Day of Action, police used batons against students by Berkeley's Mario Savio steps.



Taking a page from Oakland, Dallas has called a general strike for November 30.

The five most important OWS pieces this week:

OWS struggles to keep the peace without the police. http://ampro.me/tpowdB



Occupiers in four cities compare notes and debate tactics. http://ampro.me/rwKbQv



Does this video complicate the controversy over Oakland protester violence or simplify it? http://ampro.me/ubIdr4



Rachel Burstein argues Detroit would be easier to occupy if more bad guys still worked there. http://ampro.me/vWwEdH



Rolling Stone tracks how OWS got started. http://ampro.me/vUyXM3

Write to Josh Eidelson at jeidelson@gmail.com or on Twitter @josheidelson with suggestions for stories or pictures.