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Show Enterprise Review, May 19, 1976 Page Commission Gives Foxy Lady a Break The Foxy Lady has had its liquor license suspended for thirty days for allowing minors inside the tavern. Over the city prosecutors recommendation that city commissioners suspend the license for 60 days, they opted to give the owner a second chance. You have been served with an order to show cause, and that is a last resort. We will suspend the license for 30 7b PIP Wont Relinquish Trade provided you hire a permanent doorman thereCommissioner Glen after, Greener said. days Believe me, if you Come before this commission with an order to show cause again, we will vote for termination, not suspension, he added. Attorney Nolan J. Olsen of Midvale defended the tavern owner, saying the prob-le- m had been rectified. Dimensions of Energy Crisis Too Great for Politics byD. Van de Graaff There is an old saying that facts have a way of outrunning thoughts. That small piece of wisdom could serve today as a description of the world-wid- e energy problem. The facts are there are more and more people in the world and they are demanding better lives, demands that are rooted in energy. But our thoughts, the ideas, proposals and programs dealing with the problems are running far behind. As time slips away, it becomes more and more doubtful that we will ever catch up. If we fail to meet the worlds growing energy needs, we face the certain prospect ofwidespread social conflict and turmoil. Call it the revolution of rising expectations, or the evolution of discontent. Whatever you call it, it is a pressure cooker, a pressure cooker of frustration with the lid tightly clamped. Policies that discourage energy development, particularly political policies, are simply tightening the lid on the pressure cooker. The chief obstacles to energy growth are widely recognized. First, and one we hear a great deal about these days, concerns financial limitations. How does cost influence energy choices? How much capital is needed to develop new energy? Second, environmental limitations. In a world requiring more and more energy, how can environmental problems be resolved? And finally, political limitations, the impact of government actions, at what point do these actions become counter productive? Let me emphasize that when we discuss energy we are really talking about wants and needs of people. All too often we tend to think of a barrel of oil or a ton of coal as a commodity on an economist' s chart. But energy cannot be separated from basic wants and needs, demand for energy starts with the needs of people for food, better housing, better schools, clothing and better transportation; the whole range of human hopes and aspirations. All these desires create a need for energy use of one kind or another. The desire of people around the world for more and better services of all kinds has been increasing rapidly. Ten years from now the world may need half again as much energy as we use today. Many countries in the world are determined to pull g economies and dependence on out of dead-en- d As they move toward modem and industrialized labor. economies, energy demand will soar. How can we provide this energy? The more we look into this question the more we realize the choices are really very narrow. Solar energy and other exotics will probably not play any significant part in the total energy picture until the next century. We are going to continue to be dependent upon fossil fuels for the next twenty years. Government policies that discourage the exploration and development of oil, gas and coal reserves are heading our.world into deeply troubled waters. If the energy needs of the world arent satisfied there simply won't be enough jobs, enough goods, enough food and we will see the end of many of our ambitious social goals. As we take up the larger challenge of meeting the worlds future energy needs, it becomes more obvious the success or failure is almost wholly in the hands of government. Unless some radical changes are made, reversing the trend toward more government control, the laws of economy will count little. Instead, regulations and political restraints will determine the outcome. At that point we will surely have to pay a high price for ignoring the pressure cooker I mentioned above. Henry Adams said that "practical politics exists in ignoring facts, but the dimensions of the worldwide energy problem are too large to be left to politics. Somehow we must get back to facing the facts before it is too late. Postal Instant Press, 48 West 2nd South, will not give up its clientele when it moves next month. According to Fred Black- burn, manager, the firm is moving a few doors east, but staying on 2nd South. Most of our customers come from the office buildings nearby, he said, so we had better stay in the same area. The business, known as PIP to its customers, expects to move to 4 West and 2nd South, formerly Hole in the Wall Gallery, by the middle of June. PIP is being forced to move because the Capitol Theatre, where it is currently located, is being purchased by Salt Lake The County will County. convert it to a dance theatre, authorized by a successful bond election last December. O.C. Tanner Jewelers must also move from the theatres store front location. As news of the forthcoming relocation of the two businesses spread, competitive firms appeared along the The Quick Print street. Shoppe, at 36 West 2nd South, opened its doors last month. Paul Thomas Jewelers, at 6 West 2nd South is preparing to open soon. Quick Print acknowledged that PIPs relocation plans were an important factor in its decision to move to the 2nd South location. But it wasnt until this week that Blackburn finalized his decision to stay in the same area. We will have the same phone number and the same services, Blackburn said. Asked whether he considered Quick Print in his relocation decision, Blackburn res- ponded, that's their upi p WANTED Stockbrokers currently licensed with the state of Utah. Part or full time. Chatham Securities Corp. COMMERCIAL & INDUSTRIAL HEATING AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE Were one of the largest and most successful heating and air conditioning service contractors in the state. And small wonder. 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