6A - Friday, October 31, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 6A - Friday, October 31, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Witty ,factual'Pill' Jonathan Eig tracks women's rights history in new book By KATHLEEN DAVIS DailyArts Writer As college students in the modern era, it's hard to imag- ine life without oral contra- ceptives. It's easy to take for granted the teeny-tiny pill that nearly 40 percent of female col- lege students use, according to the American College Health Association - a staggering amount considering the pill wasn't even developed until the 1960s. "The Birth of the Pill" chron- icles the multi-decade effort to find a sufficient and effec- tive course of action for an issue that has existed since the beginning of time: unwanted pregnancy. Ripe with the con- troversies regarding women's liberation and sexual freedom, author Jonathan Eig paints a fascinating look at the science, drama and controversy behind one of the most revolutionary medical advancements of the 20th century. "The Birth of the Pill" fol- lows the crusade of four unlike- ly heroes with, on the surface, no striking similarities besides their shared desire to cre- ate a pill that would provide a solution to rising rates of pov- erty and an answer to the ris- ing feminist movement of the 1960s. Gregory Pincus, an untam- able, wild-haired scientist who was removed from Harvard's faculty for conducting unap- proved in-vitro fertilization experiments, is the central brainpower of the movement, with an unwarranted confi- dence willing to stop at noth- ing once there was a goal in mind. Pincus begins research after being approached by the aging yet fiery feminist leg- end Margaret Sanger, with hopes of creating a contracep- tive women can take without their partners knowing or hav- ing control over. Pincus dives head first into the project spends nearly a decade anc incredible amount of mo even by today's standards. funds were donated prim: by socialite Katharine Mc( mick, whose younger y were plagued by a marr to an unpredictable sch phrenic, whose death allo McCormick to accumulat vast family fortune to sp where she deemed worthy: beginnings of Pincus' vent the Enovid project. The fot player in this tale is the c ismatic Catholic doctor f Boston, John Rock, who w tles with his strong faith experiences as an OBGYN w he becomes involved with research. His love of scien progress prevails, and Roc used as the face of the resea using his faith to educate o Catholics on benefits of con ception rather than the reas they've been condemned. Eig really does start from beginning of the quest for b control, and highlights thed gers associated with unplan and unwanted pregnancy. stresses the problems of historical restriction of b control with anecdotes to from documents of the earl mid 1900s documents: moti bleeding to death after botc abortions, starvation of o children to feed the new baby a family couldn't afford to have, painful death during child- birth after one too many babies. These stories aren't told to disturb the audi- ence, they're told to give life - and a human rights perspec- tive - to early 1900s feminist movements and to educate pro- life anti-contra- ceptionists of why birth con- trol has had a positive impact The book: and on so many. Women were told d an (and in many parts of the world, ney, are still told) their health and The well-being were less important arily than the constant influx of new Cor- children, and it was time to ears make a change. iage For a novel combining both izo- history and science, "The Birth wed of the Pill" had ample potential e a to be more dry than exhilarat- end ing. However, Eig's publishing the history, primarily as a former ure, Wall Street Journal reporter urth and as the author of three other har- historical non-fictions, has rom proven beneficial in his abil- res- ity to tell a story based in hard and facts and give it personality. 'hen Eig has breathed new life into the the four central protagonists tific of "The Birth of the Pill," who k is passed years ago. The narra- rch, tive has humor, suspense and ther heart to draw in and educate tra- the 21st century reader, and all sons these components together cre- ate a beautiful narrative about the women's rights and feminism. irth The book strikes the question dan- of whether or not women's ned rights have changed since the He creation of birth control. While the we've advanced technology irth and medicine for the benefit of ken women, Eig's story reminds us y to of the need to appreciate and hers carry forth the fiery passion hed women like Margaret Sanger ider had for the cause. thoe BIRTH OF THE PILL How Four Crusaders Reinvented Sex one Launched a Rcvohuion JONATHAN EIC chronicles the history of oral contraceptives. 01 The most generic 'House of Cords' picture ever takes. The merits ofV' opening sequences By CATHERINE SULPIZIO Daily Arts Writer Last week at around 9:59 p.m., I was frantically scroll- ing through the TV listings try- ing to remember what channel Showtime was on, because the last time I watched TV on an actual TV was like, a month ago. Besides making me feel hopelessly incompetent (I decidedly do not live up to my millennial reputation), live TV always makes me consider the title sequence (the same cannot be said for those awful Subway Halloween costume commer- cials). In this case, I stumbled onto Showtime (340?) just in time to catch "The Affair" 's pretty, if not cliche, montage of enigmatic aquatic shots set to Fiona Apple's "Container." As streaming continues to take over a larger share of view- ing habits, the title sequence seems a relic of the old days when TV was an event you showed up for instead of expect- ing it show up to you. Indeed, it is an artistic conceit to think us Call: #734-418-4115 Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS 3Didn't deny 37 Novelist Grey 53 gottomaway 1Common 4 Feel offended by 39 Shower 57 Not ight telenovela theme 5 Itinerary word harbinger 58 Multigenerational 5 Travel needs for 6 India _ 40 Cracked open tale many 7 Fashion designer 41 Have words with 59 Suffix with Jumbo 10 Lose, in a Vegas Anna 46 Dept. head 62 Mount Rushmore game 8 Buzzing with 47 Workout garb figure, familiarly 14 Amplify, in away activity 49 Beyond 63 Tang 15 Not available 9 Close securely reasonable limits 64 Smallish batteries, 16 Fit 10 Run of lousy luck 50 Young wolf and a hint to how 17 *Media member 11 Threat to a WWIIl 51 One may be the answersto with acurly tail? destroyer going around starred clues are 19 Word with barn' 12 Splash clumsily 52 Ready if required formed or storm 13 Clipped 20 Sorceress jilted 18 Trip to see the ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: byJason big game? 21"Notinterested" 22Birth S WA M M A M E C 0 P 23Seahawks'org announcement TAP A ALT I M A A W L 25 With 50-Across' 24 Cimcbing E X P R E S S M A I L S L O travel guidethat Clng M E L I N A S L S H E D tosOan d 25Subectforda S N E BE A R M Y U N I T S wosthotelsand Vinci L A B tA DlOtE restaurnts? 26Onemaygointo P E P E A T U R A L 26 Time to split!" sn empty net cAPITAL LITT100 30 Ore. setting 27 Earthenware pot CKA P T LLE T R 31 Josh _:frozen 28 Bluff betrayer D A D Mexican food 29 Words oftdisgust C A T S I T U P S brand 33Holiday song S A Y N OMO I TRE N TA 32 Sitar selections closer L OtCAT OR NO SEO 34Santa_ 35S&Lofferingfor U R L W R K I N P A I R 0 Mountains: homeownersW coastal Califomia 36 Wordon the R T E O N E O N E M E R E range Great Seal of the P A S S L A T E D Y S 38*"Whateveryou United States xwordeditor@aol.com 10/31/14 sup, iss geddes "? 1 2 3 4 7 a 8 9 10 112 3 42 In-land link? 14 15 16 43 Henieon the ice 44 Gammy-winning 17 1s 19 'We Are Young" band 20 21 22 dO Cybernotes 48 n 23 24 2s 50 See25-Across3 54 "King Kong" studio 31 33 a4 so5a6on 55 Franklin's note 56"Cheers," e.g. 38 39 40 41 60 Qstari ptentate t *Reigeratoron 0 4243 44 thetfront lines? 65In __parentis 45 4 a7 a8 a 6Whatpashi so n51 52 s3 54 gurd protet 67 Legendary galley a55 56 57 58 5s 68 _school 69 How-to units so 61 s s sa 70 ActocGosling s5 66 s7 DOWN s 7 1 Digi Ilclock 6 toggle 2 Squish ares iO0I'4' ot ent Agencyo, nILt 5311 "PRIME" PARKING FOR Sale 721 S. 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For what is lost in stream- ing, live viewing restores to title sequence, at least if you are a better planner than I am and get there in time. The title sequence has a long cin- ematic history, first becom- ing popular in the late '50s by graphic designers Saul Bass and Maurice Binder - Bass's title sequence for "North by North- west" is often cited as the ear- liest example, with its striking use of kinetic typography (mov- ingtext) and geometric rhythm. And Binder of course loaded the iconic gun barrel sequence that triggers all James Bond films with "Dr. No" in 1962 (though his laudable skill for including a harem's worth of naked lady sil- houettes without ever tipping the movies out of PG territory should not be discounted). Cinema has continued its rich relationship with the title sequence since then, but only in the turn of the millennium, i.e. the dawn of Cable Glory, have TV title sequences inherited the across-the-board sophis- tication of their big screen counterparts. In 1999, a young network decided they needed a title sequence to wield some cinematic heft for their second original show, "The Sopranos." Unlike the precursors of the '90s, which usually recycled greatest hits type clips and set them to a big, recognizable song (think "Friends" and "Will & Grace"), "The Sopranos" used original footage and was free of anachronistic gimmicks like freeze frames or color manipu- lation. It was deceptively simple, just Tony Soprano driving to his New Jersey home from New York while Alabama 3's "Woke Up This Morning" played. But there is much beneath the sur- face: first it literally drives home the notion that New Jersey is Tony's turf, not the concrete sprawl of the show's predecessors it pays homage to (just look at "The Godfather"- esque logo). The camera also slices Tony into piece-y close- ups - showing his arm, then his chin and eyes, etc., which as the show developed, became a metaphor for the fragmentation of Tony's identity. "The Sopranos" 's title sequence remained unchanged through its six season run, only removing a shot of the twin towers after 9/11 (which accord- ing to David Chase, was only to preserve narrative cohesion). Other shows, though, rely on a seasonal tinkering with open- ing sequence. Take, for exam- ple, "The Wire," which varies its clips depending on which thematic bones it's going to pick that season. Clips related to prostitution, the education system, police force, drug trade and other various institutions are tossed in its deck of cards and shuffled around. A more modern example of this is "American Hor- ror Story," whose creepy title sequences have become one of the show's crown jewels. Like "The Wire" 's "Way Down in the Hole," "AHS" keeps its own jolting score season to season (though for "Freak Show," it got some carnival tweaking) but creates a different hodge- podge of the bizarre and the surreal that even Luis Buiuel and Salvador Dali could envy. At least for viewing experience, '* "The Wire" and "AHS" types of sequences build on engagement - they're an adjoining puzzle handed to the obsessive fandom for dissection and scrutiny. Of course, now, I need to return to "The Sopranos" 's sequence (and its ilk), which serves a distinctly different purpose. These sequences are visual epigrams, standalone notes that suggest theme rather than narrative. I think of "Six Feet Under" here, whose som- ber, sepia-hued shots of death play against a springy score. The montage splices together sacred and profane - a ritualis- tic shot of pair of hands washing themselves against a stark black background fades into a toe-tag on a corpse under a morgue's harsh fluorescent light. The show itself is packed with the same kind of simultaneous mys- tification and demystification of death, with a handful of black comedy for good measure. For original streaming, the consensus choice seems to be a subpar version of afore- mentioned epigraphic title sequence, perhaps because they understand even the most sophisticated opening loses its gloss four back-to-back epi- sodes in (though the exact num- ber is highly debated). Indeed, the title sequence tune out is an inevitable symptom for every binge watcher. Look at "House of Cards," for example, whose dull open- ing montage of Washington montages belies the show's addictive mix of smart political intrigue and sexual politics - or perhaps Amazon's "Transpar- ent"'s whose twinkling credits grow cloying by round two. The exception to this is Netflix's under-watched "Lilyhammer" where spritely bag-piped theme song and interesting cinema- tography are a breath of crisp (Norwegian) air. Regardless, writing this arti- cle constitutes the most atten- tion I've ever spent on this as a form. While now increasingly relegated to fast-forward terri- tory, consider the title sequence - the best television reveals a clockwork meticulousness that orders and drives it, and evalu- ation of such extends to its oft- overlooked opening. I