Jason Zweig, author of "Your Money and Your Brain," discusses how the new science of neuroeconomics can help make you rich. Kelsey Hubbard has the interview. (Sept. 14).
(Minneapolis) Just days after the Sept. 11 attack a professor of social sciences at the `U` was asked by Hillary Clinton to help victims` families, Darcy Pohland reports (2:34).
The 2008 edition of The Old Farmer`s Almanac is out. Publisher John Pierce talks about the Almanac`s history. (Sept. 11)
People
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses of this term, see People (disambiguation)
People in a theater
People denotes a group of humans, either with unspecified traits, or specific characteristics (e.g. the people of Spain or the people of the Plains). The term people is often used in English as the suppletive plural of person. However, the word persons is sometimes used in place of people, especially when it would be ambiguous with its collective sense (e.g. missing persons instead of missing people). The term people can collectively refer to all humans or it can be used to identify the citizens of a nation, or members of a tribe, ethnic, or religious group. For example, "people of color" is a phrase used in North America to describe non-whites.[1]