The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 20, 1997 - 5A ri Angle Laurie Gaylor speaks last night at the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library. 4 Author speaks on freethinkers By Peter Meyers For The Daily Atheists. Skeptics. Witches. Agnostics. eretics. In short - freethinkers. In her new book, "Women Without Superstition," Annie Laurie Gaylor gives voice to these often-silent people. Last night, Gaylor gave a presenta- tion on her book as part of a free- thought exhibit, sponsored by the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library's spe- cial collections department. The exhibit itself has received a certain amount of controversy, said Julie errada, assistant curator of the exhibit. "Somebody called today to say they were going to come down here and prove the existence of God," Herrada said, adding that the caller never came. Gaylor said that freethinking women intellectuals were responsible for many of Western society's advances in women's rights. However, they have been largely ignored by historians. These women believed that society kept women subservient largely through religion, according to her book. In order to rise in stature, they first had to attack religion, the "root of the prob- lem," Gaylor said. The audience, who described them- selves as mostly atheists and agnostics, said they appreciated the free-thought perspective. John Sikos, a lawyer from Grosse Pointe Farms, said Gaylor made a good spokesperson for atheists everywhere. "She's very polite. She has a sweet voice," he said. The media, Sikos said, often con- demns atheists as extremists. "She's a good antidote for that," he said. The term freethought should not be confused with atheism, Gaylor said. It is defined as "a rejection of dogma." "Freethought is an umbrella term.," she said. "It encompasses atheism, skepticism, agnosticism." Ed Weber, one of the co-curators ofthe exhibit, said that with Gaylor's founding of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, she discovered "her life's work of feminism and humanism." Herreda said the exhibit was largely a reaction to the special collections' annual Bible exhibit. "Every year the special collections library has a Bible exhibit which gets a lot of media attention and patronage," lerreda said. Herreda hoped the free-thought exhibit would "balance things out." Peter Werbe interviewed Gaylor ear- lier this week on WCSX radio. Werbe, himself a "third-generation atheist," was happy to give Gaylor more expo- sure because the views of atheists don't often get heard, Werbe said. "One of the functions of my pro- gram is to present views not normally heard on public radio," Werbe said. "They're so far out on the fringe, you become a heretic just to listen to them." SIX FREE BAGELS WHEN YOU BUY SIX OR MORE. NO HR U HMAC NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. ; I ivst of ichgaillel & Comedian Chris "IBring Tickets: $14 at Hillel 1429 Hill Street, (31 Sunday, April 6, 1997 Hill Auditorium University of Michigan 8:00 pm Tour" on-students 3-TKTS to charge by phone. A r ,r 1 I - ,t 4I HANG OUT WITH THE EINSTEIN BROS. ,1 ~ '1 307 State St. 741-9888 .,4 'I m I