A court rules against Occupy Wall Street. A New York judge ruled the protesters cannot take tents and tarps when they return to a Lower Manhattan park.<br/> After being evicted the night before, protesters tried to return to the park earlier Tuesday, but hit a wall of police while court appeals were being heard on the tent issue. Helmet-wearing, baton carrying police stood firm around the temporary barricades - and arrested a few who tried to shove their way back into Zuccotti Park.<br/> SOUNDBITE: OCCUPY WALL STREET PROTESTERS, (ENGLISH) SAYING:<br/> "You're breaking the law."<br/> Other demonstrators marched around the park chanting, while another group set up a temporary protest location a few blocks away.<br/> New York Mayor Mike Bloomberg ordered police to evict everyone from the privately-owned Zuccotti park saying after two months of encampment conditions had become unsanitary and intolerable. Most of the protesters left peacefully, but police arrested almost 150 others.<br/> Protesters say the eviction has re-energized them, and they now expect an even bigger turnout for a mass action protest planned for Thursday. Occupy Wall Street's website calls for demonstrators to "Shut Down Wall Street, Occupy the Subways and Take the Square."<br/> Regardless of where the protests are headquartered, Occupy Wall Street supporters say they won't give up pushing for economic equality.<br/> Carmen Roberts. Reuters