- Health Care Bill Nears Test Vote
- Thanksgiving Week Stuffed With Economic News
- Black Friday Deals May Not Signal Retail Comeback
- Victoria's Secret Hopes to Rekindle Desire for Lingerie
- UPS Sets New Rates For 2010
- Wall Street Jobs Slow to Return Despite Record Profits
- Investors to Goldman: Be Less Greedy
- Senate Panel to Mull Bernanke Nomination On Dec. 3
- $6M Verdict Upheld in McDonald's Strip Search Case
- How Stock Investors Can Play Holiday Travel
- Time Lapse World Series Is A Great Play
- Hirschhorn: Greed...or Fear
- My Top 10 Tech Toys for the Holidays
- iPhone a Better Gaming Platform Than Android?
- May Day For Dendreon
- 100% Mortgage Financing From USDA
- Holiday Tipping: Who And How Much
- Deep Discounts Should Make It a Very Tech-y Holiday
- Ben & Jerry's names new flavor after Hannah Teter
- 'New Moon' takes record $72.7M box office bite
- Losing Winfrey would be big blow for Second City
- Blockbuster plans to combine Class A and B stock
- LyondellBasell gets buyout offer from Reliance
- Hawaii anxiously watching year-end tuna supply
- Ukraine's `hot air' bedevils global climate deal
- Earnings Preview: HP faces ink worries in 4th qtr
- Thousands of Spanish farmers protest low prices
JERUSALEM - Intel said it has no plans to close a factory in Jerusalem on Saturdays, despite violent protests by ultra-Orthodox Jews who accuse the chip maker of desecrating the Jewish Sabbath.
About 1,500 protesters demonstrated Saturday outside the company's facilities, located in Jerusalem's Har Hotzvim industrial zone near ultra-Orthodox areas. Intel spokesman Kobi Bachar said Sunday the protests were sparked by the opening of a new facility at the site.
But he said the company has operated on Saturdays for more than 20 years and will continue to do so.
"Nothing has changed. We have been open there for 24 years in accordance with the law," Bachar said.
Ultra-Orthodox activists often protest businesses that open on Saturdays. City Hall's decision to open a municipal parking lot on Saturdays has sparked sometimes violent demonstrations over the past year.
Most work places in Jerusalem shut down for the Jewish Sabbath, which lasts from sundown Friday until Saturday night. Businesses that do open on Saturday's are located away from religious neighborhoods to avoid conflict.
Tensions between secular and ultra-Orthodox Jews, who make up a third of Jerusalem's residents, have always been high. Relations worsened last year when voters elected a secular mayor to replace the ultra-Orthodox incumbent.
- Technology can make or break a fortune in the world of alternative energy.
- Many people are facing the holidays with substantially smaller incomes. Here’s how some are adapting.
- Jim Cramer is a proponent of stocks that pay healthy dividends, and here are his top five dividend plays.
- From salt, to lip balm to envelopes, it turns out that bacon flavoring can sell almost anything.
- The homebuyer's tax credit jacked sales for a while, but 2010 is looking weak. Now what?
- CNBC’s technology reporter Jim Goldman guides you through the best gadgets to buy this holiday season.









