I was just listening to Kojo Nnamdi on the radio and he stated that the entire Encyclopedia Britannica was banned in Texas because it contained a recipe for beer. Snopes was no help, and when I googled, I found a site where people claimed it was a crock, but no definitive cites.
I just know there’s a Doper who knows the answer to this, right? What’s the story?
He was saying it was banned by a single school, right? I don’t find that out of the question (although it would really surprise me if there were a workable beer recipe).
No he said, and emphasized, that it was banned in the entire state of Texas. I most certainly expect that this is so much nonsense, but what I’d like to do is send him a link disproving his inane comment. I just haven’t hit on the right words to get the answer.
You sure he didn’t just mean that they banned that long-haired, blonde, bespectacled kid that did those ads back in the 90s? Because that’s a ban I could get behind.
I was under the impression that all Texas schools had the same books approved or not, so perhaps the entire school system said they would not purchase it for that reason?
This stupid “fact” was promoted in Spy magazine in 1996. It may go back further but I couldn’t find any occurance. It gets reprinted in “dumb laws” type books and internet sites.
Why the heck would that be grounds for banning the encyclopedia? So far as my research indicates, homebrewing is legal in Texas. (As it is on the federal level–I can’t find any sources that say Texas has its own laws banning home brewing).
I’m thinking he’s yet another radio guy who accepts every email he gets as fact. After all, “they” couldn’t say it if it wasn’t true, right? :rolleyes:
There’s way more reasons in the encyclopedia Brittanica to ban it than just beer. Look up “psychotropic drugs” in the big books. Provided me with a mine of useful information in my less responsible years…
I helped put together a book list for a new public library in Pharr, Texas 40 years ago. The list included the EB, and the collection was purchased for the new library.
I’ve never heard that they were removed or burned, just updated.
I was recently at a bus stop in Houston, and there were pictures of famous scientists along with a timeline and their biographies cut in stone and set in bronze for at least 100 feet along the sidewalk, mabey more. I also saw many museums with spectacular collections of artifacts, including the most complete and extensive collection of fossils I have ever seen in any American city. I dont know about the other cities, but Houston and College Station are home to some of the most intelligent and well educated people I have ever met.