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  • A New Jersey state supreme court justice will not face impeachment proceedings. Justice Peter Verniero is accused of misleading the public about the use of racial profiling by state police, but a top lawmaker has said he will block any attempt at impeachment. Eugene Sonn reports from member station WHYY in Philadelphia.
  • It's been a terrible year for the securities industry, but some analysts are predicting that bonuses will be bigger than ever. Marketplace's Amy Scott discusses just how much extra cash top executives' may have to spend this holiday season.
  • The Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee lashed out at Yahoo's CEO and top lawyer Tuesday, questioning their morality. Los Angeles Times reporter Jim Puzzanghera discusses the events leading up to the criticism.
  • Oil prices hit another record earlier this week, topping $93 a barrel. Day to Day asks an economist and an oil expert about potential price increases.
  • Forbes Magazine has released its new list of Top-Earning Dead Celebrities. Elvis, of course, rules the list.
  • Political strategist Donna Brazile, former campaign manager for the Gore-Lieberman 2000 campaign, comments on the final presidential debate. Ohio Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell, the state's top ranking African-American official, also weighs in.
  • Officials with Hewlett Packard and Bristol-Meyers Squibb have both announced plans to oust their top executives in the wake of corporate scandals.
  • Sunday marks the 300th anniversary of Leonhard Euler's birth. Who was he? Only one of the top four mathematicians of all time. Math commentator Keith Devlin talks about the life of this genius.
  • Before Monday's Virginia Tech deaths, the deadliest campus shooting in the United States was at the University of Texas on Aug. 1, 1966. Firing from the top of a tower on campus, Charles Whitman killed 16 people and injured 31. An eyewitness looks back.
  • The U.S. government has taken control of troubled housing finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and their top executives have been removed. Economics experts weigh in on what the bailout means for U.S. and Chinese investors.
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