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Show 'TTTTT'TTTVTTTVr'TTTTT ! 9 ' ' THE GREEN SHEET Thursday, December 11, 1986 Higher Ed. Has New Role: Helping Cope With Life Editors Note: The University of Utah student population is slowly aging. This is the second of two articles discussing why more adults are returning to college and how the trend is affecting the University as an institution. path of attending college immediately after high school and completing a bachelors degree in four or five years. A recent enrollment anaylsis showed that during 1985, 37 percent of UofU students (including part-tim- e and graduate students) were age 26 or older and 18 percent were 31 or older. Both figures represented about a 4 percent increase from autumn 1980. Among students working on bachelors degrees, almost 29 percent were over 25 while 14 percent were over 30. That represented a 6 percent rise over 1980 in undergraduates 26 and older and a 4 percent increase in bachelors level students 31 and older. One prime example of the university helping adults cope with individual and societal change has been the influx of older women in the student body. Many are single parents or married women who must supplement the family income. They also reflect the broader societal trend of women going to work. In autumn 1985, 31.9 percent of undergraduate women - almost one in three - were over 25. More than 20 percent - one in five - were over 30. Five years earlier, 26.5 percent of female undergraduates were over 25 while 14.7 percent were over 30. During the same five-yeperiod, the female graduate population has grown at roughly twice the rate of the male graduate total, notes Oyler. One typical, older female student is Beverly Miller, 37, who reently won a scholarship given by the UofU Womens Resource Center to women. At 20, she married and dropped out of college. She ended up divorcThen four ing and years ago, her second marriage ended in divorce. She has two children. When she was 30, she says, she started jogging. She found she was in terrible physical shape, and that made her angry. She kept running and untimately qualified for and ran in the Boston Marathon. That ac SALT LAKE. Its almost become an anachronism that the only constant in todays society is change. In a nutshell, thats one of the main reasons there has been such a rapid increase in adult and students at the University of Utah and other U.S. colleges, says Dr. James P. Pappas, associate dean of the Unviersitys Division of Continuing Education and an expert on adult learning. In the past, says Pappas, also a professor of educational psychology, the acknowledged roles of American education were inculcating social values, giving youth information about American government to prepare them for citizenship, and training them for jobs. Now, with rapid technological change, the rise of an international marketplace and changes in peoples personal lives, education - and higher education in particular - is taking on a new role: helping people adapt to changes throughout their lives. Continuous lifelong learning has become a necessity for individual and societal survival, he says. Another major explanation is educational costs, adds Gary Oyler, director of institutional research at the University. Tuition at U.S. public universities has increased an average of 101 percent in the past 10 years. UofU tuition has been rising about 8 percent a year. More students are increasing their work hours and going to the University just part-timConsequently, more are in the 26 to 30 age range by the time they complete their bachelors programs. Adults are defined as students 26 and older, while the nontradi-tiona- l label encompasses any student who has not followed the usual . e. 092 AUTOMOBILE 092 AUTOMOBILE complishment gave her the confidence to return to the University. as a She now works part-tim- e technician for a scientific laboratory in Research Park and is a junior majoring in organizational communication. She is considering going on for a masters degree in business administration. Increasingly, adult men are also turning to the Unversity in making life and career transitions. Some have been laid off from industrial Some seek jobs and must mid-lif- e career . changes. Others hope to enchance their marketability in their present field. In 1980, 20.4 percent of male undergraduates at the Unviersity were over 25 and 7.1 percent were over 30. A year ago, 26.5 percent of bachelors level males were 26 or older and 10 percent were 31 or older. UofU senior Howard Buttrick, 28, exemplifies the fact that higher education is no longer pegged to a particular period in life. He graduated from a Boston area high school in 1977 but at the time wasnt interested in college. For the next few years he traveled around and held various jobs. Finally he landed in Park City where he got a job as a sales representative selling ski tour packages to travel agents. He was assigned a territory in the southeastern United States. Later he was promoted to assistant sales director. At 26, having taken only two college courses in his life, he entered the university to major in marketing. He presently works halftime as a research assistant to a business professor. With his foreign language skills (he speaks Spanish and French and is learning Japanese) and work experience, his future prospects appear even brighter than his career to date. Meanwhile, higher education costs are increasingly delaying college completion for otherwise traditional students. Tuition increases are just part of the picture. A few years ago the University also abolised a practice of allowing students who registered for 12 credits (the minimum full load) to add up to six more at no additional charge. Essentially, there was a flat rate for all loads between 12 and 18 hours. Now, there is an incremental schedule under which a student pays ... more for each hour added. A student taking eight credits (about a half load) pays half as much as one taking 16 credits. Fee and book costs have also risen significantly. Because of such increases, U.S. Labor Department figures show one in five college students under 25 attends only part-timOf the part-tim- e students, 60 percent hold fulltime jobs. Most such students will be e. over 25 by the time they finish their programs. Our part-tim- e enrollment has risen tremendously, says Oyler. Between 70 and 80 percent of UofU students work more than 20 hours a week. Forty percent of all students are married. While the trend adultnontraditional is emanating from the outside society, it is also shaping the Univer- sity as an institution. ' r. - Y 1 , f i is M.s .'(J - ' ... DISPLAY A free "Christmas Lecture" at the UofU than 30 more present exciting chemical demonstrations for high school students, such as this one showing how iron is made. FIREWORKS will Light, Sound Show Scheduled At UofU available to area schools or which cost too much to present to all chemistry classes, he explains. We have the equipment and supplies the schools dont have, so we thought, why not share? Ragsdale, a history buff, holds the lecture in memory of Michael Faraday, a renowned English chemist and physicist whose popular Christmas lectures at the Royal Institute in London intrigued scholars of the 1800s. The demonstrations, he says, are entertaining and educational. Solid doses of scientific principles are mingled with a historical perspective of the great men who shaped the Ragsdale will premiere several future through their experiments. new experiments for the popular He encourages students to explore program. Weve had such large au- scientific mysteries by using the diences the last several years that classic experimental approach -well hold our extravaganza three formulating hypotheses and checknights this year, says Ragsdale. ing them out. We want everyone to have a chance Ragsdale has devoted more than to see that science is challenging and 20 years to chemical education, fun. receiving numerous state and naMany of the demonstrations will tional awards for his innovative involve chemicals that are not teaching techniques. SALT LAKE. A spectacular light and sound show of more than 30 perplexing and exiting chemical demonstrations will be presented for high school science students, their friends and teachers Monday at through Wednesday, Dec. the University of Utah. The third annual Chris mas Lecture, which is free to the public, will begin at 7 p.m in 2008 (formerly 103) Henry Eyring Chemistry Building. Commentary will be given by Dr. Ronald O. Ragsdale, professor of chemistrey, and Dr. Jerry A. Driscoll, a with the department of chemistry. 092 AUTOMORII F 15-1- BUY OR LEASE BUY OR LEASE BUY OR LEASE BUY OR LEASE $300 APR OR i BUY CASH BACK Available lecturer-demonstrat- St. 1X6061 . . . West Jordan resident Melvin West, 36, spent three in in his 20s, "but I didn't know what I wanted to do." college years After dropping out of school and working for several years in electronic!! firms, he has returned Iff the UofU and is now majoring in physics. He plans to become a secondary school science teacher. I don't tend to picture myself as old, he said. "When I was here in my 20s anyone my age would have seemed ancient. But today I dont RETURNING BUY A NEW LYNX FOR AS LOW AS really feel old. Tax & Plates $500 Down 700 iOUDNTOFyiL 2773 SO. MAIN, BOUNTIFUL Service IY OR LEASE 700 LEGAL NOTICES BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF SOUTH JORDAN CITY, STATE OF UTAH: SECTION I. AMENDof the MENT. Section Revised Ordinances ol South Jordan City is amended to read in its entirety as follows: and i BUY l Commercial-Ind- (C-I- ) Districts. Business signs shall not exceed the following limitations and restrictions: (d) Sign area shall be no more than 64 square feet for a sign, 16 square feet for a monument sign, and 6 square feet for a directional sign. Where a sign projects over a vehicular traffic area, the minimum vertical clearance between the bottom of the sign and the ground shall be 14 feet. In pedestrian areas, the minimum clearance shal be 8 feet. g a. (Pole) and Monument (Ground) Signs. 1. A single business on a single or contiguous or adjacent parcel of property: (a) The number of signs on such property shall not exceed one or monument sign. (b) Maximum height of signs shall be the lesser of (1) the highest point of the roof of the building or (2) a height of 20 feet. Monument signs shall be no more than 6 feel in height. (c) Directional signs shall be allowed at points of entrance or exit to the property, and shall not exceed a height of three feet measured from the existing grade at the base upon completion. (d) The area of a permitted sign shall be no more than 64 g square feet for a sign, 16 feet for a monument sign, and 6 square feet for a di- rectional sign. 6. Structural supports shall be designed, covered or concealed in such a way as to be harmonious with other parts of the sign. b. Wall Mounted Signs. 1. Signs shall cover an area no more than 10 percent of the total area of the wall on which the sign is mounted. with two or more occupancies, signs shall 2. On buildings midnight e. Menu Boards for Drive-I- n Restaurants. 1. No more than two freestanding or menu boards shall be allowed per business and shall be located not less than 45 feet from the street property line. 2. Maximum area shall not exceed 16 square feet per sign. 3. Maximum sign height shall not exceed 6 square feet for menu signs. 4. A landscaped area shall be provided at the base of the menu sign having an area of at least one square foot for every two square feet of sign area. (a) The number of signs for each complex or building shall g not exceed one or monument sign identifying the center and individual businesses therein, except when frontage and driveway access is provided to the complex or building from two collector or arterial streets, one sign may be permitted at each street. Monument signs may be permitted for pads fronting on a upon pri- or approval of the Planning Commission. (b) The height of freestanding signs shall be the les-of sor of (1) the highest point the roof of the building, or (2) a height of 20 feet. Monument 6 signs shall be no more than feet in height. f. Price Signs for Service Station. The number of price signs shall not exceed one sign per service station for each type of fuel offered for sale by the service station, except that when signs are attached to the pumps a sign may be on two sides of each pump. 1. 2. Total area of all price signs shall not exceed 18 square feet per service sta- tion. 3. Signs may be attached to fuel pumps, the underside of Attention: Ralph Schamel, Location & Environmental Studies, 4501 South 2700 West, Salt Lake City, Utah 84119, telephone any time during regular office hours, the maps, drawings and An other pertinent information developedof by the Utah Department Transportation as well as written views received to date from tiny Interested persons or groups will be available for public inspection and copying at the Utah Department of Transportation Headquarters, South 2700 West, Salt Lake Utah. 4501 City, WILLIAM D. HURLEY, P.E. Director Utah Department ol . Transportation NOTICES NOTICES a. Small Residential Demeans the convelopment struction of a dwelling or other for use on residential building real property, or the division of land into separately owned parcels but not constituting either 1 ) a judicial decree of partition, or (2) a subdivision. SECTION 2. EFFECTIVE DATE. This Ordinance shall become effective immediately. ed, that on December 16, 1986, the Board ol Trustees of the Municipal Building Authority of Murray City, Utah (the MAGNA MOSQUITO ABATEMENT Magna Mosquito Abatement Board of Trustees, has set December 1 1th Board Meeting as tor the 1987 a budget hearing budget at 7 p.m. at the district Magna, Utah. District PASSED AND ADOPTED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF JORDAN CITY, STATE OF UTAH, on this 18th day of November. 1986. Manager Lusty R. AN ORDINANCE ADDING AND ENACTING CHAPTER 2 OF TITLE 6 OF THE REVISED ORDINANCES OF SOUTH JORDAN CITY RELATING TO SMALL LAND MAYOR DEVELOPMENTS. ATTEST: WHEREAS, the health, safety and welfare of the residents of South Jordan require that small development of land be regulated by the City as herein provided; Richard N. Wame CITY RECORDER SJC11-1- NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC OPPORTUNITY FOR PUBLIC HEARING On the Proposed Improvements to 5400 South Street From 3200 West to 4015 West In Salt Lake County Project No. 4 The Utah Department ol Transportation herewith advises all Interested persons or groups that it proposes to widen and Improve 5400 South Street from BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF SOUTH JORDAN CITY, STATE OF UTAH: SECTION ENACTMENT. Chapter 2 of Title 6 of the Revised Ordinances of South Jordan City is added and enacted to read in its entirety as follows: 2 miles. The improvements will include slgn.il SMALL RESIDENTIAL Improvements, Intersection realignment and curb and gutter. Installation of by SECTION: Definitions Application Procedure and Requirements Appeals 6 The public is Iwewith advised " . .'ublic Hearing I :l an conducted DEVELOPMENTS 1 approximately 1. CHAPTER TWO 3200 West to 4015 West the Utah b. Other Terms. The definitions found in section are incorporated in this Chapter by this reference. cedure Application Pro- and Requirements. The owner of the land, or his authorized agent, shall file an application for approval of a small development. This application shall satisfy the requirements of this section. Definitions. PASSED AND ADOPTED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF JORDAN SOUTH CITY, STATE OF UTAH, this 18th day of November, 1986. Theron B. Hutchings B. THERON HUTHCINGS, MAYOR ATTEST: Richard N. Warne CITY RECORDER SJCll-l- SOUTH JORDAN CITY ORDINANCE NO. 86-1- 7 AN ORDINANCE AMENDING TITLE 3. CHAPTER 1 OF THE OF REVISED ORDINANCES SOUTH JORDAN CITY RELATING TO a. Form. The application shall be made on forms available at the office of the Director of Planning and Zoning together with a fee as established by resolution of the City Council. OTHER b. Copies. The application shall be accompanied by a minimum of six copies of drawings to a scale of not more than one inch equals one hundred feet on a sheet of 24X36 inches prepared by a land surveyor licensed or an engineer registered by the State of Utah. The drawings shall contain the following in- SECTION 1. AMENDMENT. ol Ihe Revised SECTION Ordinances ol South Jordan City Is amended to read In Its entirely formation. 1. Owners properties. SOUTH JORDAN CITY ORDINANCE NO. 8 THERONB. HUTCHINGS, feet. Questions concerning this project the opportunity for a hearing may be directed to the Utah Department of Transportation, or Evan Signs shall be installed in such a manner that there is no visible support structure. zontal distance between suspended signs shall be fifteen 84119-599- SECTION 2. EFFECTIVE DATE. This Ordinance shall become effective immediate- SOUTH d. Suspended Signs. Signs hanging from a support structure shall not exceed ten square feet in total surface area, nor five square feet per face; may not project beyond the outside limits of the arcade. marquee, or canopy to which they are attached; and shall have a minimum clearance above the sidewalk of eight feet The minimum hori- Registered United Stales Mail addressed to: Utah Department of Transportation. Olfice of Community Relations. Attention: James E. Johnston, 4501 South 2700 West, Salt Lake City, Utah office, 2611 So. 9080 West, 3. No part of any sign shall project above the wall on which it is mounted. 1. Window signs which are afpainted on or temporarily no fixed to paper shall cover more than 25 percent of the window area and shall not be so affixed as to block clear view of exits or entrances or to create a safety hazard. This applies also to inside illuminated signs (e g. neon, etc.) which are within 18 inches of the window surface. 26, 1986. canopies above pumps or as an integral part of and monument signs. ly. 4. Decmeber Requests must be sent by harmonized lettering which is part of an overall theme or design. have c. Window Signs. 2. For building complexes or multiple businesses occupying a single building (which may be compartmentalized). public landscaped area shall be provided at the base of the sign having an area of at least 4 square feet for each square foot of sign area. 5. A of the proposed submit a written request postmarked no later than ustrial 4. Signs shall be at least 5 feet from any public and 25 feet from any other property line. features organization desiring that a public hearing be held must NOTICES upon completion. Department ol Transportation to discuss the location and design improvements will be held only if requested. Any person or BUY OR LEI OR LEASE 700 LEGAL (c) Directional signs shall be allowed at points of entrance or exit to the property, and shall not exceed a height of three feet, measured from the existing grade at the base 3. B 1 Parts Open Sat. NOTICES AMENDAN ORDINANCE OF ING SECTION THE REVISED ORDINANCES OF SOUTH JORDAN CITY RELATING TO SIGNS IN AND I ZONES. Community-Commercia- & 700 LEGAL SOUTH JORDAN CITY ORDINANCE NO. 9 ) 292-720- BUY OR LEASE BUY OR LEASE NOTICES NOTICES LINCOLN-MERCUR- of adjacent metes and bounds description of the lotlots. 2. A width of 3. adjacent dedicated city streets. 4. Location of existing or proposed public utilities. 5. Location of any irrigation ditches or canals. 6. Location of nearest fire AND PARKING ZONING REQUIREMENTS FOR BUSINESS LICENSES. BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF SOUTH JORDAN CITY, STATE OF UTAH: as follows: I. Grounds for Denial. The grounds set loth elsewhere in this Title lor revocation of a license shall also be grounds tor denial of a license in the first place. Specifically, no license shall Issue to a business violating a zoning ordinance or causing or contributing to a violation ol a zoning ordinance. 'Zoning ordinance' refers to all of Title 7 of these Ordinances and includes the minimum parking to the requirements applicable location ol the business. hydrant. 7. Signature block for Planning Commission approval. 8. Stamp of the land surveyor preparing the document and name of the land owner. SECTION 2. AMENDMENT. c. Letter of Approval. The application shall have a letter of approval from Salt Lake County Sewerage Improvement District No. 1 or for the installation and use of a septic tank approval from the Salt Lake County Health Department. 5. Without limiting the generality ol the loregoing. It is specifically provided that a license issued pursuant to this Title may be revoked or suspended if the licensee violates, or causes or contrbutes to a violation of the zoning ordinance of the City, the provisions of the including zoning ordinance relating to parking requirements applicable to the licensee's location. d. Staff Review. The Direc- tor of Planning and Zoning shall review the application and drawings and request refrom the commendations Public Works Department, the the City Fire City Engineer, Department and other appropriate agencies. e. Planning Commission Action. The Director of Planning and Zoning shall, within twenty-on- e days of receipt of the application, place the application on an agenda of the Planning Commission. The Planning Commission may approve, conditionally approve, or disapprove the within a application time after It is conreasonable sidered by the Commission. Appeals. A decision of the staff or Planning Commission under this Chapter may be appealed to the City Council as provided in Chapter 1 of this Title (section Section the Revised Ordinances Is amended by and the following adding enacting as subsection 5 of said section: of SECTION 3. EFFECTIVE DATE This Ordinance shall become effective immediately. PASSED AND ADOPTED BY OF SOUTH THE CITY COUNCIL "Authority") anticipates authorizing the issuance and sale of its Lease Revenue Bonds, Series 1986, in an aggregate principal amout of not to exceed $1,200,000 (the "Bonds) dated as of December 1, 1986 to the bidder offering to purchase the Bonds on terms most beneficial to the Authority. The purchase price shall be not less than 97 of par, plus accrued interest to the date of delivery. The Bonds are to be issued for the purpose of (i) financing golf portions of an course (the "Project) to be leased to Murray City, Utah on an annually renewable basis: (ii) providing for a debt service reserve fund: and (iii) paying issuance expenses to be incurred in connection with the issuance and sale of the Bonds. The Bonds will bear interest payable semiannually on June 1 and December 1, beginning June 1, 1987. at a net effective rate of not to exceed 9 per annum and shall mature on or before December 1, copy of the Resolution to be adopted on or about December 16, 1986 by the Authority authorizing the issuance and confirming the sale of the Bonds shall be placed on file in the office of the City Recorder of the City from 8:00 a m. to 5:00 p m. for a period of at least thirty (30) days from and after the date of the publication of this notice. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that a period of thirty (30) days from and after the date of the publication of this notice is provided by law in which any person in interest shall have the right to contest the legality of the Resolution of the Authority. or the Bonds of the Au- thority authorized thereby, or any provision made for the security and payment of such Bonds, and that after such time no one shall have any cause of action to contest the regularity, formality or legality thereof for any cause whatsoever. DATED this 1986. 2nd day of GeneH. Rosvall s Gene H. Rosvall President ol Municipal Date of Publication: December 11, 1986 Murray Eagle NOTICE OF BONDS TO BE ISSUED NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to the provisions of Section Utah Code Annotated (1953), as amend- - Principal Maturity (July 1 Amounts Maturing 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 $160,000 270.000 285.000 305.000 330.000 350.000 375.000 405.000 435.000 155.000 A copy of the Resolution adopted on December 4, 1986 by tne City Council of the Issu- er authorizing the issuance and confirming the sale of the Bonds is on file in the office of the City Recorder of the Issuer at 2470 South Redwood Road m West Valley City, Utah, where it may be examined during regular business hours of the City from 8:00 a m. to 5:00 p.m. for a period uf at least thirty (301 days from and after date of the publication of this notice. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that a period of thirty (30) days from and after the date of the publication of this notice is provided by law in which any person in interest shall have the right to contest d the legality of the Resolution of the City Council adopted on December 4, 1986, the Bonds of the Issuer authorized thereby, or any provision made for the security and payment of such Bonds, and that after such time, no one shall have any cause of action to contest the regularity, formality or legality thereof for any cause whatWVC11-1- SOUTH JORDAN CITY ORDINANCE 86-2- 1 ORDINANCE REPEALING THE REQUIREMENT OF A LIGHT IN THE REVISED AN MC11-1- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to the provisions Utah Code of Section MURRAY CITY 8. Authority of Murray City, Utah Theron B. Hutchings. Mayor THERON B. HUTCHINGS, MAYOR Richard N. Wame CITY RECORDER Excise Tax Revenue Refunding Bonds. Series 1984 and to pay the costs of issuing the Bonds. The Bonds are to be purchased at a discount of not to exceed 97.25 of the principal amount thereof and shall bear interest at rates of not to exceed The interest on the Bonds shall be payable on July 1. 1987 and each January 1 and July 1 thereafter until said principal sum is paid. The Bonds shall mature on July 1 of each of the years and in the amounts as follows: Building WEST VALLEY CITY NOTICE OF BONDS TO BE ISSUED ATTEST: $3,870,000 soever. JORDAN CITY, STATE OF UTAH, on this 18th day ot November, 1986. of the Issuer adopted on December 4. 1986. are to be issued for the purpose of providing funds to refund West Valley Citys outstanding 2006. A December, 700 LEGAL NOTICES 700 LEGAL NOTICES 700 LEGAL 700 LEGAL 700 LEGAL LEGAL Annotated 1953, as amended, that on December 4, 1986, the City Council ol West Valley City, Utah (the Issuer) accepted the offer of Kirchner Moore & Company, a subsidiary of Drexel Burnham Lambert, Salt Lake City, Utah, to purchase the $3,070,000 West Valley City, Utah Excise Tax Bonds, Revenue Refunding Series 1986 ( the "Bonds ) The Bonds, pursuant to a Resolution of the City Council YARD ORDINANCES OF SOUTH JORDAN CITY. building. Also, in any subdivision, all of the improvements designated in the Section shall extend without interruption from the subdivision access to and including the bi '.inn for which the Certificate of C ccupancy is to be issued. SECTION 2. REPEALER. of the Revised Section Ordinances is hereby repealed ts recodified and Section as Section 3. EFFECTIVE DATE and repeal effected in Sections 1 and 2 above shall take effect as to each subdivision, the application of which is filed with the City on the day of posting or publishing of this ordinance or later. This ordinance shall have no effect on subdivisions, the applications of which are received by the City prior to the date on which this ordinance is published or posted, and the previous, now amended SECTION The amendment or repealed sections shall continue in effect for subdivisions now underway. PASSED AND ADOPTED BY COUNCIL OF SOUTH JORDAN CITY, STATE OF UTAH, on this 2nd day of December, 1966. THE CITY THERON B. HUTCHINGS, MAYOR ATTEST: Richard N. Warne CITY RECORDER SOUTH JORDAN CITY ORDINANCE NO. 86-2AN ORDINANCE AMENDING TITLE 6. CHAPTER ONE OF THE REVISED ORDINANCES OF SOUTH JORDAN CITY RELATING TO SUBDIVISIONS. BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF SOUTH JORDAN CITY, STATE OF UTAH: SECTION 1. DECODIFICATION. The present Chapters Ore and Two of Title 6 of the Revised Ordinances of South Jordan City are decodified, but remain SECTION 2. ENACTMENT. The provisions attached hereto setting forth a new and amended subdivision ordinance, are incorporated herein by reference, and are hereby ordained and enacted as Chapter One of Title 6 of the Revised Ordinances. SECTION 3. EFFECTIVE DATE. This Ordinance shall become effective immediately. PASSED AND ADOPTED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF SOUTH BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF SOUTH JORDAN CITY, STATE OF UTAH: JORDAN CITY. STATE OF UTAH, on this 2nd day of SECTION 1. AMENDMENT. of the Revised Section Ordinances ol South Jordan City Is amended to read In Its entirely as follows: THERON B. HUTCHINGS, Improvements Required lor Certilicete ol No Cenricate ol Occupancy. Oocupancy lor any building shall be Issued until electricity, gas line, water, sewer, e asphalt, curb, gutter and oh site sidewalk shall be completed and operable for the servicing of said December, 1966. MAYOR ATTEST: RICHARD N. WARNE CITY RECORDER Enioy the savings benefits of CLASSIFIED ADS Read them regularly for real buys. Clean out those closets and sell items you will no longer use with a CLASSIFIED AD li I ,rf, rf ft y. 1 dfc- -" in effect pending inclusion in an amended 2omng ordinance. |