Retro Sexy: Great tailoring is back, as in this eye-catching cashmere jacket by Lela Rose paired with side ruched skirt and leopard print clutch.
With the advent of discount eyewear websites, many optometrists are trying to trap customers into buying contact lenses when they get their prescriptions to keep them from buying cheaper online.
With a surge in the popularity of quick canning, Memphians are going back to the kitchen this fall to prepare for the winter with recipes like Julie Ray's bread and butter pickles.
Anxiety brought on by false positives from mammograms has led doctors to rethink their policy on the frequency of breast exams.
With an unprecedented warm winter, it is an early year for tulips at the Dixon Gardens and Gallery where 230,000 bulbs are well into their flowering cycle. Despite efforts by the staff to keep them from blooming, many varieties started to flower in February, nearly a month earlier that usual.
This spring is all about the flirty things like this hot metallic strappy cocktail dress paired with silver pumps.
Traditional organized religions are getting organized online as well as using social networks like Twitter and Facebook to reach congregants and new members alike.
With deaths from opioid overdose exceeding those from car crashes, the medical community is coming to recognize an error of catastrophic proportions. U.S. doctors wrote 245 million prescriptions for the highly addictive painkillers last year at the cost of some 20,000 lives.
With Christmas bearing down and kids clamoring for sweets, time-conscious Memphians are organizing cookie exchanges to create a little variety in seasonal treats.
As a push for productivity increase keeps workers in for their lunch break, frozen food becomes a staple of the office diet.
Exotic species: A three-piece, silk, hand-painted ensemble by Mary Jane offers a tunic top, chiffon burnt-out pants in a Renaissance pattern and skirt with beaded fringe and matching hat.
New studies are focused on getting health providers to do a better job washing their hands as recommended. Along with soap and water, hospital employees also have gel and foam sanitizer available to clean their hands.
Research shows that risk taking may be hardwired into the teenage brain, but reckless behavior can also have a silver lining, enabling teens to learn faster.
Elementary schools aren’t waiting any more to teach kids about money with new programs that go beyond just counting change.