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Travelers visiting Denver this holiday season won’t find any pine or fir needles on the city’s signature Mile High tree. Instead, they’ll find LED lights — 60,000, to be specific — on a 110-foot-tall sculptured tree at one of the entrances to the Denver Performing Arts Complex.

“We have never actually done anything like this before,” says Ashley Geisheker, associate director of communications at the city’s tourism office, Visit Denver. The tree will feature programmed lighting using pixel-mapping technology and choreographed to music that changes every 30 minutes throughout the evening.

Technically, even though the sculpture is shaped like a Christmas tree, it strives to be more inclusive. During some shows, the dazzling lights will flicker to multicultural musical numbers linked to Christmas, Hanukkah and Kwanzaa.

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Also, for those who want to check out the inside, the installation can hold 140 people for what tourism officials call an “immersive interior viewing experience.” It’s open to the public, and admission is free.

You can visit between 5 and 10:30 p.m. through Jan.1 and between 5:30 and 9 p.m. Jan. 2-31.

“There was an opportunity to create a new holiday attraction in Denver,” says Richard Scharf, president and chief executive of Visit Denver. “Given the other notable lighting displays throughout the city — including at the Denver Zoo, Denver Botanic Gardens and both Union Station and the City & County Building downtown — a spectacular lighted art installation was a great fit.”


Weekend visitors to Griffith Park who go car-free will be able to explore attractions other than the observatory without spending a dime or breaking a sweat. A new hop-on, hop-off shuttle will stop at a dozen locations throughout the park, including Travel Town and the Autry Museum.

The GP Parkline shuttle service, which Mayor Eric Garcetti unveiled Tuesday, will begin operation Saturday. It will run from noon to 10 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays.

Park visitors can now take a daily DASH bus from Metro’s Red Line Vermont/Sunset station to the Greek Theatre and Griffith Observatory. The shuttle will provide access to more destinations within the park.

“The foundation was laid with the DASH Observatory Route, and this is yet another piece of the puzzle,” said Ashley Rodriguez of L.A.’s Department of Recreation and Parks. “People can come to the park and get around without a car, which makes the park available to people who never had a way to visit before.”

Five green-and-white branded shuttle buses will run the route connecting the existing DASH and Metro bus stops in and around the park. Buses are expected to arrive at stops every 15 to 20 minutes. Each seats 25 passengers with extra room for strollers and wheelchairs, and a bike rack on the front for cyclists.

“For the first time in its 123-year history, visitors can access all that Griffith Park has to offer without once needing a car,” Councilman David Ryu said in a statement. “The Parkline is free, accessible and efficient —and just one way we are reducing traffic and increasing access in Griffith Park.”

The shuttle is part of a series of upgrades in the park approved in 2016 as a way to reduce air pollution and increase access to the park.


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Embrace holiday mode with tamales, lights shows, parades and snowfall at these close-to-home events.

Oxnard

Tamales come all kinds of ways — including drizzled in mole, wrapped in banana leaves or filled with pineapple — at the Oxnard Tamale Festival at downtown’s Plaza Park. Sip Mexican hot chocolate as you shop for gifts, watch dance groups and catch a glimpse of the Oxnard Christmas Parade as it passes the park.

When: Tamale festival at 9 a.m. and parade at 10 a.m. Dec. 7

Cost, info: Free. Family friendly. Dogs OK. (805) 385-7545; oxnardtamalefestival.com

Los Olivos

See Los Olivos turn festive for Los Olivos Olde Fashioned Christmas. Town-wide celebrations include a holiday market, train rides, roaming carolers and a display of gingerbread houses decorated by local students and artists — all culminating in a tree lighting with live jazz music.

When: Noon Dec. 7

Cost, info: Free. Family friendly. Dogs OK. (877) 327-2656, bit.ly/losolivostree

Ventura

The Ventura Winter Wine Walk and Holiday Street Fair returns for its 10th year. Street fair attendees will find vendors, performers and snowfall along three blocks of Main Street. Wine Walkers can sip beer and wine at 70 tasting places in downtown Ventura.

When: Street fair at noon; Wine Walk at 4 p.m. Dec. 7

Cost, info: Street fair is free, family friendly and open to pets; Wine Walk is from $55, for 21 and older and open to service dogs only. (805) 628-9588, venturawinterwinewalk.com

Wilmington

The Port of Los Angeles’ holiday events lineup includes Wilmington Winter Wonderland, where games, crafts and 50 tons of snow transform Wilmington Waterfront Park. Later, decorated vessels light up the Los Angeles Main Channel for the L.A. Harbor Holiday Afloat Parade. The port also suggests visiting the nearby Banning Museum’s Victorian Christmas Celebration and Open House for horse-drawn trolley rides and other period fun.

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When: Winter Wonderland at noon; parade at 6 p.m. Dec. 7

Cost, info: Free. Family friendly. Pets OK at attendees’ discretion. (310) 732-3508, bit.ly/PortofLAevents

San Juan Capistrano

Visit Mission San Juan Capistrano and its Serra Chapel after hours during Capistrano Lights. Opening night has fire pits, readings of “The First Christmas” and music by harpists, carolers and mariachis. Tree lightings, activities for kids and a Nativity scene in the ruins of the Great Stone Church happen nightly.

When: Opening night entries at 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. Dec. 7. Enter before 5 p.m. for nightly programming. Dec. 8 through Jan. 6, except for Dec. 24, 25 and 31.

Cost, info: $15 on opening night; $10 on regular nights. Family friendly. Only service dogs permitted. (949) 234-1300, bit.ly/sjclights

Los Angeles

Take a wreath-making workshop with Glasswing Floral during Sparkle DTLA at the Bloc. When you’re finished, admire your handiwork against a backdrop of illuminated ornaments, snowflakes and Christmas trees, all synchronized to holiday songs, at one of the shopping center’s four hourly lights shows.

When: Wreath-making at 6 p.m. Dec. 7; Sparkle DTLA shows run nightly at 6, 7, 8 and 9 p.m. through Dec. 27

Cost, info: Free. Family friendly. Dogs OK. (213) 454-4926, bit.ly/bloclawreaths


Google Chief Executive Sundar Pichai will take over the top job at the search giant’s parent company, Alphabet Inc., as co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin step away from their roles as CEO and president, respectively.

Page and Brin, who founded Google in 1998, will continue to serve as Alphabet “board members, shareholders and co-founders,” they wrote in a company blog post Tuesday. They continue to control the majority of voting shares in Alphabet.

Pichai’s ascendancy to Alphabet CEO was not a complete surprise, as Page and Brin have been inching away from public-facing roles and were no longer involved in daily operations.

“We’ve never been ones to hold on to management roles when we think there’s a better way to run the company,” the founders said.

The decision comes amid rising profits at Alphabet. Since Page and Brin established Alphabet in 2015 and appointed Pichai the CEO of Google, the parent company has recorded 15 profitable quarters. Its stock has climbed more than 80% since the parent company was formed. Last year, Google reported $136 billion in revenue, up from $110 billion the year before.

Despite this financial success, Alphabet and other large technology companies now face increased scrutiny over privacy concerns, hate speech and disinformation.

Pichai has managed this scrutiny, testifying before Congress last December to answer questions about data privacy and Google’s purported political bias in search results against conservatives, which he denied.

Such pressure is likely to continue, particularly heading into the 2020 election year, and it might be a reason Page and Brin are choosing to further distance themselves from day-to-day operations, analysts said.

In the years since Google cemented its slot as the dominant player in search, the co-founders have at times opted to stay out of the public eye and focus on projects that particularly interest them. Page has recently spent time on a company called Kitty Hawk, which is trying to build flying cars. Brin has focused on promoting Google’s more creative initiatives, including Google Glass.

“The regulatory head wind is hitting everyone — no one is immune,” said Brent Thill, managing director of technology at financial services firm Jefferies. “As long as they are doing the right thing for consumers and making their life better and not taking advantage of some loophole … they’re going to be fine.”

This isn’t the first time Page and Brin have stepped aside. Eric Schmidt took over as Google CEO from Page in 2001, a few years before the company’s initial public offering, and kept the job for a decade. Page resumed the Google CEO role in 2011 until Pichai’s appointment in 2015.

Page and Brin retain power in a different way: through their holdings of Alphabet stock. Their shares give them a combined 51.3% of votes, so if they join forces they can unseat a CEO who dissatisfies them.

Pichai has had a meteoric rise since joining Google in 2004. He helped to spur development of Google Toolbar and later, Google Chrome. In 2014, he was tapped to lead product and engineering for all of Google’s products and platforms, including Gmail and Android. The next year, he was leading the company. He joined Alphabet’s board of directors in 2017.

As Alphabet CEO, his portfolio will expand beyond Google’s core products to include initiatives such as the self-driving car subsidiary, Waymo.

“I’m excited about Alphabet and its long-term focus on tackling big challenges through technology,” Pichai said in a statement. “I’m looking forward to continuing to work with Larry and Sergey in our new roles. Thanks to them, we have a timeless mission, enduring values and a culture of collaboration and exploration. It’s a strong foundation on which we will continue to build.”

Analysts said they didn’t expect much to change under Pichai’s leadership at Alphabet. After all, the company has seen growth in its other bets, such as Waymo.

“It’s not like Larry’s leaving the keys at a time when the company is in flux,” said Dan Ives, managing director at Wedbush Securities.

Investors reacted similarly to the news — shares of Alphabet were up 0.6% in after-hours trading on Wall Street.

“It’s just a natural evolution,” Thill said. “When you’ve had a two-decade run where they’ve had incredible success … there’s a lot of other things in life to pursue.”


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Bumble Bee Foods former Chief Executive Chris Lischewski was convicted in a price-fixing conspiracy, capping a years-long U.S. investigation that shook the packaged-seafood industry and pushed Bumble Bee into bankruptcy protection last month.

Lischewski was found guilty Tuesday by a federal jury in San Francisco after just a few hours of deliberations in what experts say is likely the final piece of the Justice Department investigation. Prosecutors alleged that Lischewski conspired with colleagues and executives at rival companies on a “peace proposal” in order to boost prices and meet earnings targets set by Bumble Bee’s 2010 sale to Lion Capital.

The former CEO faces up to 10 years in prison and a fine of $1 million, according to the indictment. His lawyer, Elliot Peters, declined to comment.

The conviction underscores the Justice Department’s “willingness and ability to try high-stakes price-fixing cases against senior corporate executives,” said Phil Giordano, a partner in the antitrust practice of Hughes Hubbard & Reed and a former federal prosecutor who is not involved in the case.

San Diego-based Bumble Bee, owner of the largest North American brand of packaged seafood, pleaded guilty in 2017 to a felony charge of conspiring with competitors Starkist Co. and Chicken of the Sea Inc. to fix and raise prices of canned tuna in the United States from 2011 through at least late 2013.

The company’s guilty plea carried a criminal fine of $25 million, a reduced figure that the Justice Department agreed to after Bumble Bee argued that a stiffer penalty would tip it into bankruptcy. Subsequent lawsuits filed against Bumble Bee by its customers — mostly major U.S. grocers — added to the financial pressure, leading the tuna company to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection from creditors Nov. 21.

“Prosecutors don’t try to put companies out of business,” Giordano said. “But sometimes a fine by the book is in fact so substantial that it can bankrupt the company.”

Starkist pleaded guilty to the price-fixing charges in 2018 and also agreed to cooperate. Chicken of the Sea, owned by Thai Union Group, received conditional leniency from the Justice Department for its cooperation with the investigation and didn’t have to pay fines.

In the case against Lischewski, prosecutors leaned on testimony from his former subordinates, Kenneth Worsham and Walter Cameron, who in 2016 pleaded guilty to price fixing and agreed to cooperate with prosecutors.

Peters devoted much of his closing arguments to attacking the credibility of Worsham and Cameron, arguing that they fed prosecutors information that prosecutors wanted to hear in order to reduce their own sentences and fines.

Lischewski’s conviction may make him a target in class-action lawsuits against Bumble Bee and related parties, said Eric Snyder, chairman of the bankruptcy practice at Wilk Auslander, who is not involved in the case.“Given the criminal fine here, he might end up filing for personal bankruptcy,” Snyder said.


Dressed in a black suit and wearing a somber expression, Elon Musk testified in a Los Angeles federal court Tuesday that he was merely trading insults with a British cave rescue diver when he called him a “pedo guy” on Twitter.

Musk, the chief executive officer of Tesla and SpaceX, is accused of defaming Vernon Unsworth with accusations of pedophilia and child rape with no basis in fact.

Unsworth helped lead the effort to extract 12 Thai boys and their soccer coach trapped in a flooded cave in July 2018.

The tweet came after Musk showed up in Thailand with a miniature submarine that he said could safely transport the children. On CNN, Unsworth called his move a “PR stunt” and said Musk “can stick his submarine where it hurts.”

Musk responded with the “pedo guy” tweet, and doubled down when a Twitter user questioned his claim, writing “bet ya a signed dollar it’s true.” Later Musk sent an email to a Buzzfeed reporter urging him to “stop defending child rapists,” apparently referring to Unsworth.

Musk testified that Unsworth’s criticisms were “wrong and insulting, so I insulted him back.” Musk’s lawyers argue that does not constitute defamation.

Unsworth’s attorney, L. Lin Wood, portrayed Musk as egotistical and vindictive. Musk accused Unsworth “of being a ‘pedo’ in the midst of what should have been one of the proudest moments of his life,” Wood said.

Unsworth is seeking unspecified compensatory and punitive damages.

On the stand in U.S. District Court in downtown L.A. Musk portrayed himself as a concerned human being trying to do the right thing.

“At first I thought my help would not be needed,” Musk said. But after a cave rescue diver died, with a monsoon on the way, it looked like a “pretty bad situation,” Musk said. “If immediate action wasn’t taken, the boys would die.”

“That would be on my conscience forever,” he said.

Declining Musk’s offer, the rescue team dressed the boys in wetsuits, supplied them with oxygen, anesthetized them to avoid panic, and guided them out underwater one by one.

In opening arguments, Musk’s lawyers painted Unsworth as a man hungry for fame who suffered no damages for being labeled a “pedo guy.” The tweet, the argument went, was a joke, which Musk later deleted and apologized for. “This case is about an argument between two men exchanging insults,” said Musk lawyer Alex Spiro.

The case is not the first time Musk’s Twitter behavior has caught up with him. In an August 2018 tweet, Musk claimed he had “funding secured” to take Tesla Inc. private. That tweet proved false and the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission sued him for fraud. Musk settled, but had to pay a $20 million fine and give up his chairman’s seat at the electric car company.

Musk has called Twitter a “war zone.” He told the television news show “60 Minutes” last December that “if somebody’s gonna jump in the war zone, it’s like, ‘OK, you’re in the arena, let’s go!”

Musk’s ‘pedo guy’ tweet prompted a letter from Unsworth’s lawyer to Musk in August 2018, which read in part: “You published three different tweets to your 22 million followers that Mr. Unsworth engages in the sexual exploitation of Thai children, and you did so at a time when he was working to save the lives of 12 Thai children.”

Buzzfeed News reporter Ryan Mac ran a story about the letter, prompting an email from Musk, in which the executive told told him to “stop defending child rapists” and accused Unsworth of moving to Thailand to take a child bride. (Unsworth said his wife was 40 when he married her.)

Musk’s lawyers were unsuccessful in their attempt to keep the email from the jury.

When Wood asked Musk whether he should choose his words carefully, Musk replied, “There are a lot of things I say, and not all of them have the same quality of thought … not everything can be thoughtful.”

At one point, when the lawyers were getting in the weeds of a following Twitter exchange, Musk, seemingly frustrated, noted that people say falsehoods on Twitter “all the time.”


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OPEC nations grapple with oversupply of oil

December 4, 2019 | News | No Comments

The world may be heading for an even greater oversupply of oil, and that possibility — which could drive down fuel and energy prices — is hanging over members of the OPEC cartel as they head into negotiations Thursday.

The oil-producing nations will decide whether to stick with production cuts they’ve endured for the last three years, relax them or deepen them in the hopes of propping up prices.

They’re negotiating through a tangle of tensions driving members in competing directions.

Saudi Aramco’s stock market debut, which is expected Friday, has put Saudi Arabia in a precarious position as it bets on what volume of oil production will hit a sweet spot for prices, with the added pressure of considering the interests of the state-run oil giant’s shareholders. The nation is already bearing the burden of the largest share of OPEC’s production cuts.

But some nations such as Iraq have been ignoring the agreement and producing more than their allotted amount.

“If people are already not complying to the current agreement, what’s the point to those that are complying cutting more? So the others can go on cheating?” said Bhushan Bahree, executive director of global oil at research group IHS Markit. “I think the Saudi position is they’re willing to cut more if needed, but they want better compliance.”

Brent crude oil hovered around $61 per barrel Wednesday afternoon. Prices have fluctuated throughout the year, reaching nearly $75 per barrel in April after U.S. sanctions on Iran and Venezuela limited world supply, but lingering trade tensions between the U.S. and China dampened economic expectations, pushing prices back down.

West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. benchmark crude, was trading at around $56 Wednesday afternoon, and its price followed a similar trajectory throughout the year.

As it stands, OPEC nations have agreed to cut production by 1.2 million barrels per day through March 2020, and most analysts expect OPEC nations to extend those production cuts until at least summer.

“If they just keep the existing situation, then you get this massive oversupply,” said Jacques Rousseau, managing director at Clearview Energy Partners.

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Rousseau believes OPEC nations will cut production by an additional 400,000 barrels per day to keep supply and demand in balance during the first half of next year, with the cuts made mainly by Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. But substantial cuts may be difficult to achieve with some OPEC members following their own agendas.

“Iraq has exceeded its production target every month this year,” Rousseau said. “Granted, there’s some unrest going on in the country, but I don’t think they’ll voluntarily reduce.”

Meanwhile, Russia, which is not part of OPEC but has been following its lead on production limits in recent years, has indicated it wants its oil production recalculated in a way that’s in line with OPEC nations. That could enable it to produce more oil.

And even if members of the cartel cut production, there’s more oil coming online from non-OPEC nations including the U.S., Canada, Brazil, Norway and Guyana, which will more than make up for any drop in production, according to IHS Markit.

The dynamic to watch will be whether Russia and Saudi Arabia will come to an agreement on production levels in the early and middle parts of next year, said Heather Heldman, managing partner at Luminae Group, a geopolitical intelligence firm.

“If something goes awry with Saudi production in the next few months, and there’s a fairly good chance something will happen … Russia’s going to be the first party looking to fill that gap,” Heldman said. “And I think the Saudis know that.”


DALLAS — 

Federal officials are considering requiring that all travelers — including American citizens — be photographed as they enter or leave the country as part of an identification system using facial-recognition technology.

The Department of Homeland Security says it expects to publish a proposed rule next July. Officials did not respond to requests for more details.

Critics are already raising objections.

Sen. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) said Tuesday he would introduce legislation to block the plan and prohibit U.S. citizens from being forced to provide facial-recognition information. He said a recent data breach at Customs and Border Protection shows that Homeland Security can’t be trusted with the information.

Facial recognition is being tested by several airlines at a number of U.S. airports. American citizens are allowed to opt out of being photographed, although a 2017 audit by a federal watchdog agency found that few U.S. travelers exercised that right — barely more than one per flight.

Federal law requires Homeland Security to put into place a system to use biometrics to confirm the identity of international travelers. Government officials have made no secret of their desire to expand the use of biometrics, which they say could identify potential terrorists and prevent fraudulent use of travel documents.

The Department of Homeland Security announced the possibility of expanding biometrics to U.S. citizens in a recent filing. A spokesman for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, part of Homeland Security, said there would be a chance for the public to comment on any change in regulations.

In a November 2018 report, Homeland Security said facial recognition is the best biometric approach at borders because it can be done quickly and “with a high degree of accuracy.” The agency said privacy risks “are mostly mitigated.” Photos used to match Americans to their identities are deleted within 12 hours, according to the report.

Jay Stanley, a policy analyst for the American Civil Liberties Union, said the government has told the public and Congress repeatedly that American citizens would be exempt from mandatory biometric screening.

“This new notice suggests that the government is reneging on what was already an insufficient promise,” Stanley said in a statement. “Travelers, including U.S. citizens, should not have to submit to invasive biometric scans simply as a condition of exercising their constitutional right to travel.”

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WASHINGTON — 

The Justice Department on Tuesday charged eight people — including a prominent political donor to both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump and a Lebanese American businessman who was a witness in Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation — with conspiring to conceal the source of more than $3.5 million in donations to Clinton.

The 53-count indictment unsealed in federal court in Washington detailed efforts by Ahmad “Andy” Khawaja and George Nader to conceal the true source of the millions of dollars in campaign contributions, which prosecutors allege were made to gain influence with high-level political figures, including Clinton.

Khawaja, who lives in Los Angeles and is the owner of the online processing company Allied Wallet, is accused of making the donations in his name, his wife’s name and his company’s name, even though they were actually funded by another businessman, Nader.

As they arranged the payments, Nader was in touch with an official from a foreign government about his efforts to gain influence with the prominent politicians, prosecutors charge. The government is not identified in court documents.

A 2018 investigation by the Associated Press detailed that Khawaja, Allied Wallet and top executives contributed at least $6 million to Democratic and Republican candidates and groups. The donations earned Khawaja access to Clinton during the 2016 presidential campaign and a post-election Oval Office visit with Trump.

Clinton is not identified by name in the court documents made public Tuesday, but there are repeated references in the indictment identifying the candidate as a woman. Federal donor records show Khawaja gave millions of dollars to Democratic candidates, including the main political action committee supporting Clinton’s campaign. He also donated $1 million to Trump’s inaugural fund.

Nader is already in federal custody on unrelated charges accusing him of transporting a dozen images of child pornography and bestiality. He had provided grand jury testimony in the special counsel’s Russia investigation about his efforts to connect a Russian banker to members of Trump’s transition team. He had also worked to advance Saudi Arabia’s agenda to the Trump administration.

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An attorney for Nader and a spokesman for Khawaja’s company did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The indictment alleges that Khawaja, Nader and another defendant, Rudy Dekermenjian, attended an event to support Clinton in April 2016. The next day, Nader told the foreign official in a WhatsApp message that he had a “wonderful meeting with the Big Lady,” according to the indictment.

Prosecutors allege that Dekermenjian and five others — Roy Boulos, Mohammad “Moe” Diab, Rani El-Saadi, Stevan Hill and Thayne Whipple — conspired with Khawaja to make contributions while concealing the actual origin of the funds. Those contributions, made to various political committees, totaled more than $1.8 million, according to federal prosecutors.

Khawaja is also accused of obstructing a federal grand jury investigation by providing a witness with false information about Nader and his connection to Khawaja’s company after he knew the witness was called to testify, prosecutors said. Boulos, Diab, Hill and Whipple also are charged with obstructing the grand jury’s investigation by allegedly lying to the FBI.


SEOUL, South Korea — 

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un rode a white horse up a sacred mountain on his second symbolic visit in less than two months, state media reported Wednesday, as his country is threatening provocation if the United States refuses to make concessions in nuclear diplomacy by year’s end.

The Korean Central News Agency released many photos showing Kim riding on snow-covered Mt. Paektu along with his wife and top lieutenants, all on white horses. Kim also climbed the mountain, the highest peak on the Korean Peninsula, on horseback in mid-October.

Mt. Paektu and white horses are symbols associated with the Kim family’s dynastic rule. Kim has made previous visits there before making major decisions.

Kim said that “we should always live and work in the offensive spirit of Paektu,” according to KCNA. “The imperialists and class enemies make a more frantic attempt to undermine the ideological, revolutionary and class positions of our party.”

On Monday, Kim visited Samjiyon county at the foot of Mt. Paektu to attend a ceremony marking the completion of work that has transformed the town to “an epitome of modern civilization,” KCNA said. It said the town has a museum about the Kim family, a ski slope, cultural centers, a school, a hospital and factories.

Samjiyon was one of main construction projects that Kim launched in an effort to improve his people’s livelihoods and strengthen his rule at home. The construction spree has also been seen as a demonstration of his power in the face of international sanctions designed to squeeze his economy and get him to give up his nuclear program.

The latest mountain trip comes as a year-end deadline set by Kim for Washington to come up with new proposals to salvage nuclear diplomacy is approaching. The negotiations remain stalled for months, with North Korea trying to win major sanctions relief and outside security assurances in return for partial denuclearization steps.

The North’s Foreign Ministry warned Tuesday that it’s entirely up to the United States to choose what “Christmas gift” it gets from the North. North Korean officials have previously said whether North Korea lifts its moratorium on long-range missile and nuclear tests depends on what actions the U.S. takes.

Last week, North Korea test-fired projectiles from what it called a “super-large” multiple rocket launcher that South Korea’s military said landed in the waters off the North’s east coast.

KCNA said Wednesday the ruling Workers’ Party will hold a central committee meeting in late December to discuss unspecified “crucial issues” in line with “the changed situation at home and abroad.” It’s unclear what specific agendas are at stake.

Many experts say the United States is unlikely to make new proposals that would satisfy North Korea.

President Trump on Tuesday urged Kim to follow through on what he described as a promise to denuclearize the North. Trump and Kim have met three times since North Korea entered nuclear negotiations last year.

“My relationship with Kim Jong Un is really good, but that doesn’t mean he won’t abide by the agreements … he said he will denuclearize,” Trump said during a visit to London. “Now, we have the most powerful military we ever had, and we are by far the most powerful country in the world and hopefully we don’t have to use it. But if we do, we will use it.”

Trump also revived a nickname he had previously given Kim when he traded crude insults and threats of destruction during a provocative run in North Korean nuclear and missile tests in 2017.

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Kim “likes sending rockets up, doesn’t he?” Trump said. “That’s why I call him Rocket Man.”