TIMELINE: OCTOBER 2004
"Voting is more an act of devotion than an act of democratic input," a libertarian Web site once wrote. "Voting is the holiest ritual in America's civic religion, and not much else." And yet, the opportunity to choose is cherished wherever it is given, whether in an environment of oppression or apathy. In Afghanistan, millions of people voted in the country's first-ever presidential election last month. In the United States, the presidential race looked to be headed for another virtual tie after the candidates met in the last of their debates. Meanwhile, voting proceeded in Belarus amid allegations of corruption, and planning continued for elections in Iraq and municipal elections in Gaza and the West Bank. In France, candidates for the 2007 presidential election began campaigning on the printed page, with over half a dozen books by presidential hopefuls in bookstores. The Nobel Prize foundation made its own choices, including the Nobel Peace Prize for Kenya's Wangari Maathai, the first African woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize.
For all the divisiveness of the U.S. presidential campaign, there emerged from October a united nation—Red Sox Nation, euphoric about its team's first World Series win since 1918 (and maybe wondering what to cheer for now). It takes an implausible feat to break an 86-year-old curse, and that's what the Red Sox pulled off in their comeback from a three-games-to-none deficit against the Yankees before sweeping the Cardinals. Air traffic controllers in the Boston area were on the lookout for flying pigs.
Jacques Derrida, the philosopher who said of his school of deconstructionism "that it never proceeds without love," died in October at the age of 74. Christopher Reeve, who played Superman in the movies but lived the last years of his life paralyzed from the neck down, died at 52. Pierre Salinger was the press secretary for John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson. Cardinal James Hickey, longtime head of the Archdiocese of Washington, D.C., was an advocate for the powerless in a center of power. Janet Leigh played the victim in Alfred Hitchcock's creepy classic Psycho. Rodney Dangerfield, whose self-deprecating one-liners became a classic stand-up act, died at 82. In fond obituaries, he got plenty of respect.
Other October headlines: Fossils of tiny human cousins discovered - Cassini spacecraft takes tantalizing photos of Titan - NYC subway turns 100 - Martha Stewart goes to prison—Yasser Arafat hospitalized - Ichiro sets record for hits in a season—Oregon man's television sends distress signal to Air Force base- Hikers complete first-ever trek of U.S. Pacific coast
ELECTION ROUNDUP: Crunching the numbers, from the Washington Post and Slate—Why is the country still tied? by David Brooks in the New York Times - Endorsements: Chicago Tribune for Bush; Washington Post for Kerry (more) - Campaign 2004: the end of voter apathy, from the New York Times - Beliefnet's Stephen Waldman on Bush's faith here and here in Slate; more from the U of Chicago's Martin Marty Center and from David Aikman—Does George W. Bush go to church? from the New Republic - Jim Wallis versus Jerry Falwell on values and the election from Sojourners—The brand names voters associate with the candidates from Landor Associates - Missouri as an election bellwether from the Atlantic Monthly and Chicago Tribune - Four fateful elections from Smithsonian, and why this is or isn't the most important election ever, from the New York Times -How did we get the Electoral College? from The Week - Can a president create jobs? from the New York Times - How does the federal budget really work? by P.J. O'Rourke in the Atlantic - Power in politics and literature by Julia Keller in the Chicago Tribune





