Charlie Plavchak, manager of Brewski's in Ogden, Utah, removes lettering from one of the bar's doors on the first day that the state's new liquor laws take effect on July 1, 2009. Utah has long had a host of liquor laws that befuddled newcomers, but none was as maddening as the state's private club system, created primarily to shield Mormons from alcohol while allowing drinkers to imbibe heavily taxed booze. AP Photo logo AP Photo 32 months ago

Charlie Plavchak, manager of Brewski's in Ogden, Utah, removes lettering from one of the bar's doors on the first day that the state's new liquor laws take effect on July 1, 2009. Utah has long had a host of liquor laws that befuddled newcomers, but none was as maddening as the state's private club system, created primarily to shield Mormons from alcohol while allowing drinkers to imbibe heavily taxed booze.