In pursuit of the ultimate in cold, creamy, silky, slushy, bowl-licking goodness across the island of Sicily. La vita doesn't get more dolce than this.
After surviving the wreckage of split families, Generation X parents are determined to keep their marriages together. It doesn't always work out.
Unrest, inflation and an aging populace stand in the way of the Middle Kingdom's touted domination.
Indiana schools are no longer required to teach children to write cursive. Is this the end of civilization as we know it?
The skinny on fast food; rest to test best; killer paydays; and the interplay of balls, strikes and race.
The tackiest Southern indulgence is now a favorite of top chefs nationwide.
The last of four easy-enough recipes by Colorado chef Lachlan Mackinnon-Patterson is a shaved pork salad with arugula, corn and potatoes.
"Isn't that the wine that comes in a jug?" Not anymore, says Lettie Teague. Soave makers—even Bolla—are turning out quality wines.
Customers wait five years and spend between $5,000 to $12,000 for one of Sacha White's handmade bicycles.
Ohio State University is vacating all of its football program's 2010 wins, as well as its Sugar Bowl victory over Arkansas in January 2011, in the wake of a scandal that cost head coach Jim Tressel his job.
As golf catches on globally, the U.S. represents a smaller portion of the golfing population. But another factor is the effective systems that other countries are using to nurture elite players.
Todd Wells has quietly achieved a distinction that no other American man—even Lance Armstrong—can claim. He's the current national champion in cross country and short track (both forms of mountain biking) and cyclocross.
Give the AC a break this summer with a fan design that's elegant and energy efficient.
Sara Ruffin Costello on the seductive beauty of black-bottomed pools.
The beloved British food writer opens up about the pleasures of unfussy cooking, afternoon tea and big tubs of vanilla ice cream.
Telecommunications tycoon Juan Antonio Pérez Simón discusses the influence of his fellow Spaniards on the history of art and highlights a few personal favorites in the exhibit "From El Greco to Dalí: The Great Spanish Masters from the Pérez Simón Collection," at the San Diego Museum of Art.
An aesthetic triumph, Alain Resnais's "Last Year at Marienbad" rejects the crutch of a traditional storyline and is the antithesis of the French New Wave's spontaneity and naturalism.
Dozens of pages of her early, unfinished novel, "The Watsons," will be auctioned at Sotheby's
A new museum will show nothing but work of the Abstract Expressionist Clyfford Still.
Italian fine-dining venues seem to be a dime a dozen in Hong Kong these days, but celebrity chef Pier Bussetti, who won a Michelin star for his Ristorante Pier Bussetti al Castello di Govone in Piedmont, Italy, is making sure Domani stands out.
House of the Day: Hong Kong Island's south side is favored for its beaches, lower population density and (slightly) more laid-back attitude. This 3,954-square-foot, two-bedroom townhouse in Deep Water Bay is $19.3 million.
Thousands of South Koreans cheered as Pyeongchang defeated two European cities to become the host of the 2018 Winter Olympics. The decision will mean billions of dollars in investment for the mountain resort.
For more than 30 years, director Tsui Hark has established himself as one of the leading architects of Hong Kong's film industry, gaining a reputation as a hard-working and demanding filmmaker.
As wedding season heats up, a look at some new-classic keepsakes.
Images of medieval style from "Illuminating Fashion: Dress in the Art of Medieval France and the Netherlands."
Kids who are endangered by everyday foods need to learn how to fend for themselves in the real world.
Restaurant, hotel, shopping and activity recommendations from Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz, artist Dale Chihuly and others.
Novelist J. Courtney Sullivan recalls a massive meal in the south of France that intimidated—then inspired.
With competition victories and world-record scores since his 2007 debut, the Dutch-born Totilas has sold out dressage shows world-wide and brought a jolt of celebrity to a sport that has traditionally struggled to attract a following.
The Lexus CT200h adds luxury to the Toyota Prius hybrid powertrain, but it also adds sluggish performance and lame styling, says Dan Neil.
Six letters, magical device: It's iPhone! Got one? If so, then you can take your wordplay everywhere, no pencil (or pen) necessary.
What J.K. Rowling achieved—long before her work was adapted into films—was a children-led read-in that crossed all age barriers, uniting families in a fireside act of sharing an unfolding story.
Handlers at Sotheby's are saying the company is trying to shortchange their role in the process by asking for concessions in their contracts. With the art handlers' union raising the specter of a strike, the two sides are set to meet Monday in an attempt to hammer out a deal.
In pursuit of the ultimate in cold, creamy, silky, slushy, bowl-licking goodness across the island of Sicily. La vita doesn't get more dolce than this.
It is an enduring mystery to anyone reared on $50 Levi's: How can a pair of jeans cost as much as the Phantom, the new look from True Religion that will be priced as high as $375?
For a reminder of just how tough an air-traffic controller's job can be, we visit the busy control tower at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport.
Big engines and throwback looks lure baby boomers and twentysomethings, but rising fuel prices and new regulations loom once again.
Form-meets-functional designer roosts get downright Duchampian.
Shakespeare was wrong: Meditation can alleviate suffering.
Joe Queenan on the tradition of indebtedness—and why Junior should now pay up.
Form-meets-functional designer roosts get downright Duchampian.
What one thinks about remote places is more important than what one sees, says author Pico Iyer.
Matt Ridley, in his Mind & Matter column, on contagious cancers.
Cruise into autumn with the season's nod to glamorous seventies dressing, Pierre Cardin on buying a village in the south of France, eating in Copenhagen and Chicago, restoring a Modernist palace in Brazil, luxury shopping in Mongolia, and more in the July/August issue of WSJ. Magazine.
Your one-stop guide to warm-weather eating, drinking, dressing, game playing, luxury lounging, road tripping and wind-in-your-hair driving.
Luxurious living space with many levels. Featuring dramatic entry foyer, living room with fireplace and...
More Details »Luxury villa commanding a superb position in a high residential area with panoramic views across the...
More Details »With over 15,000sf of living space, this remarkable estate home is located on one of the most private...
More Details »Phife Dawg of A Tribe Called Quest discusses his relationship with Q-Tip, his own creative impulses and the group's context in contemporary music.
Betty Ford, the widow of late President Gerald R. Ford and one of the co-founders of an addiction treatment center in California that bears her name, died today at the age of 93, according to various reports. Ford's name has become synonymous with the battle against addiction.
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have arrived in Los Angeles for a long-awaited visit. And what did the world's most glamorous couple do in the world's most glamorous region? Why sit and watch VCs drone on about social media, start-ups and East London's tech scene, of course.
Endnotes: Does money lead to happiness? And more from around the web...
When a major-league home-plate umpire is of the same race or ethnicity as the pitcher, he's more likely to call strikes, a new study finds. But the difference disappears when the ump knows his work is being analyzed by the league's computerized pitch-tracking system.
The disturbances on the surface of Saturn shown here depict the largest, most intense storm observed on Saturn by NASA's Voyager or Cassini spacecraft. The storm, currently active, encircles the giant planet, encompassing an area eight time the size of earth. Inside the planet's atmosphere, lightning is generated in the water clouds where rain and hail make electricity, creating a significant radio noise. Scientists are mystified as to why Saturn stores energy for decades and releases it all at once. This behavior is unlike that at Jupiter and Earth, which have numerous storms going on at all times.
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