From Friday, June 9 2006 - 12:00am To Monday, June 12 2006 - 12:00am Every day
June 10 & 11 -- All of the 18 wineries in Fair Play are small, family owned wineries, dedicated to producing highly flavorful, mountain grown wines. The Festival will feature special events, gourmet faire, barrel tasting, live music, festival discounts, exclusive after hours events and, of course, wine tasting. You’ll have the opportunity to meet and mingle with winery owners and winemakers, while enjoying the spectacular views and beautiful scenery of the Fair Play area. 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Busby Cellars, Cantiga Wineworks & Gourmet Deli, Charles B. Mitchell Vineyards, Chateau Routon, Colibri Ridge Winery, dkcellars, Fitzpatrick Winery, Granite Springs Winery, Latcham, Mt Aukum Winery, Oakstone, Perry Creek, Sierra Oaks Estates and more $75/person per weekend, $40 for designated driver ticket (per person per weekend. 1 Souvenir Riedel 18 5/8 oz. Crystal Wine Glass www.fairplaywine.com For more information contact: Fair Play Wineries Assn. (866) 932-2202
(Reuters) - The Federal Reserve acted on rumors last month and called Credit Suisse Group to see if it had pulled a credit line from Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc , The Wall Street Journal said citing people familiar with the matter.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac shares plunged to their lowest levels in almost 20 years on Wednesday, while the mortgage companies' bonds rallied on the belief that an increasingly likely government bailout would wipe out shareholders but secure their massive debt.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - California's attorney general is reviewing a request by former employees of IndyMac Bancorp Inc to investigate whether a New York senator triggered the bank's collapse by releasing confidential information.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York's state attorney general office on Wednesday intensified its probe into auction-rate debt focusing on Bank of America Corp, Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank AG, while issuing a warning to brokerages.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. stocks rose on Wednesday as bank and energy shares rebounded even as investors dumped Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac on fears of an imminent government bailout of the housing finance companies.