Academic literature on the topic 'Bank of Kentucky'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bank of Kentucky"

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Essayyad, Musa, Banamber Mishra, Omar Al-Titi, and Prakriti Karki. "INVESTIGATING BANK MARKET CONCENTRATION IN THE SOUTHERN REGION OF THE UNITED STATES: IMPLICATIONS FOR BANKING STRUCTURE." International Journal of Finance 6, no. 3 (November 8, 2021): 91–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.47941/ijf.717.

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The objective of this paper is to determine whether commercial banks in the Southern Region of the United States are highly concentrated and hence less competitive in offering favorable lending terms to borrowers and subsequently hindering economic development in their region. The paper employs concentration measures to estimate the concentration degrees of commercial banks in the Southern Region of the United States in 2019. Data for deposits and loans plus leases of banks in 12 states in the South were collected for the year 2019 from the following sources: http://www.ofi.state.la.us/ and http://www.ibanknet.com/. Empirical results show that only commercial bank markets in Kentucky and Florida have perfect competition. The commercial banks in other ten states are either uncompetitive or less competitive, thereby creating adverse economic development environments for prospective corporate and individual borrowers in those states, and consequently impairing the profitability, stability and risk structure of the banking industry in most states covered in the Southern Region. The paper provides a value- added literature contribution to US banking market structure. The next step would be up to state and federal bank regulatory bodies to address the issue in those less competitive states and their potential on economic development in that region.
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Baskin, Carol C., and Jerry M. Baskin. "Role of temperature and light in the germination ecology of buried seeds of weedy species of disturbed forests. II. Erechtites hieracifolia." Canadian Journal of Botany 74, no. 12 (December 1, 1996): 2002–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/b96-240.

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At maturity in September, about half the seeds (achenes) of Erechtites hieracifolia (Asteraceae) collected in Kentucky were dormant (did not germinate at any test condition), whereas the others were conditionally dormant (germinated only at a narrow range of test conditions). Seeds sown on top of soil in an unheated greenhouse in September failed to germinate in autumn because temperatures were below those required for germination; however, they germinated at comparable temperatures the following spring. Seeds buried in soil in September 1987 and exposed to natural seasonal temperature changes were nondormant (germinated over full range of test conditions) by April 1988, but they entered conditional dormancy by October 1988. Each October through 1995, exhumed seeds exhibited conditional dormancy. Since 89% of the seeds were viable after 8 years of burial, it appears that although seeds of this species are wind dispersed, they also have the potential to form a long-lived seed bank. Thus, soil disturbance at any time from May to September could result in establishment of plants from seeds in the seed bank. Keywords: seed dormancy, Asteraceae, dormancy cycles, buried seeds, light.
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Hall, Sarah L., Christopher D. Barton, and Carol C. Baskin. "Topsoil Seed Bank of an Oak-Hickory Forest in Eastern Kentucky as a Restoration Tool on Surface Mines." Restoration Ecology 18, no. 6 (February 11, 2009): 834–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1526-100x.2008.00509.x.

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Thorp, James H. "Linkage between Islands and Benthos in the Ohio River, with Implications for Riverine Management." Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 49, no. 9 (September 1, 1992): 1873–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/f92-207.

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Anthropogenic reductions in braiding, meandering, and snag abundance have diminished habitat heterogeneity of regulated rivers, factors directly influencing island formation, retentive capacity of the ecosystem, and community diversity. Habitat heterogeneity associated with riverine islands should, therefore, be of paramount importance to the ecosystem and may require special management protection. To understand the influence of these alluvial formations on riverine benthos, macroinvertebrate assemblages were sampled near three islands in the Ohio River above Louisville, Kentucky, USA. Benthos was collected along six bank-to-bank transects located 1 km above and below islands and near the head, middle, and foot of islands. Islands have significant positive effects on invertebrate density and diversity that appear related to changes in physical habitat characteristics. Current velocity and substrate particle size are diminished in narrow channels between islands and shore, and areal extent of the littoral zone is enhanced within an otherwise deepwater region. Shallow water and slower currents promote growth of submerged vascular plants and macrophytic algae. Because of a relatively low exploitation by humans, islands probably enhance snag formation and input of organic matter, both factors having positive effects on macrofauna. Creation of selected riverine preserves near islands as a management tactic is recommended.
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Akomolafe, Olusoji A. "Politics and the African Development Bank by Karen A. Mingst, Lexington, The University Press of Kentucky, 1990. Pp. xii + 204. $26.00." Journal of Modern African Studies 31, no. 4 (December 1993): 685–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022278x00012349.

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Solberg, Svein Øivind, Guro Brodal, Roland von Bothmer, Eivind Meen, Flemming Yndgaard, Christian Andreasen, and Åsmund Asdal. "Seed Germination after 30 Years Storage in Permafrost." Plants 9, no. 5 (May 2, 2020): 579. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants9050579.

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More than 30 years ago, the Nordic Gene Bank established a long-term experiment on seeds stored under permafrost conditions in an abandoned mine corridor in Svalbard, as a tool to monitor storage life under these conditions. The study included seeds from 16 Nordic agricultural and horticultural crops, each represented by two or three cultivars (altogether 38 accessions). All seeds were ultra-dried to 3–5% moisture before being sealed in glass tubes. Germination tests were performed in accordance with the International Seed Testing Association (ISTA) protocols. At the initiation of the experiment, the samples showed good germination with the median value at 92%. The overall picture remained stable over the first twenty to twenty-five years. However, the variation became larger over time and at 30 years, the median value had dropped to 80%. At the lower end, with a high drop in germination, we found rye, wheat, and English ryegrass. At the upper end, we found Kentucky bluegrass and cucumber. The lowest germination was found in samples with the highest initial seed moisture levels. Pre-storage conditions are likely to be of major importance for longevity.
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Saja, David B., and Joseph T. Hannibal. "Quarrying History and Use of the Buena Vista Freestone, South-Central Ohio: Understanding the 19th Century Industrial Development of a Geological Resource." Ohio Journal of Science 117, no. 2 (June 29, 2017): 35. http://dx.doi.org/10.18061/ojs.v117i2.5498.

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The Buena Vista Member of the Mississippian Cuyahoga Formation is an economically valuable freestone that is homogeneous with almost no sedimentary structures. The Buena Vista was one of the earliest clastic rocks quarried in Ohio. Early quarries dating at least back to 1814 were located in the hills on the north bank of the Ohio River near the village of Buena Vista, south-central Ohio. By the 1830s, quarries had also opened up along the route of the Ohio & Erie Canal in the Portsmouth area to the east; followed by quarries that opened along a railway line that ran north up the Scioto River valley. Waterways transported the Buena Vista to many cities and towns, including Cincinnati, Ohio, Louisville, Kentucky, and Evansville, Indiana, on the Ohio River, New Orleans on the Mississippi River, and Dayton and Columbus on the Ohio canal system. Later railways transported this stone further afield to Illinois, Wisconsin, and Alberta. Census reports, industry magazines, and other historical accounts document the use of this stone across much of the eastern US and into Canada. Historically, it has been used for a variety of items, including entire buildings, canal structures, fence posts, and laundry tubs. Some 19th-century structures built with this stone remain in cities where it was once commonly used. Literature reviews, field observations, and lab analyses are here compiled as a useful reference to both the urban and field geologist in the identification of the Buena Vista Member, a historically important building stone, in buildings and outcrops, respectively.
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Streams, Meg, J. S. Butler, Joshua Cowen, Jacob Fowles, and Eugenia F. Toma. "School Finance Reform: Do Equalized Expenditures Imply Equalized Teacher Salaries?" Education Finance and Policy 6, no. 4 (October 2011): 508–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/edfp_a_00046.

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Kentucky is a poor, relatively rural state that contrasts greatly with the relatively urban and wealthy states typically the subject of education studies employing large-scale administrative data. For this reason, Kentucky's experience of major school finance and curricular reform is highly salient for understanding teacher labor market dynamics. This study examines the time path of teacher salaries in Appalachian and non-Appalachian Kentucky using a novel teacher-level administrative data set. Our results suggest that the Kentucky Education Reform Act (KERA) provided a salary boost for all Appalachian teachers, resulting in a wage premium for teachers of low and medium experience and equalizing pay across Appalachian and non-Appalachian districts for teachers of high experience. However, we find that Appalachian salaries fell back to the level of non-Appalachian teachers roughly a decade following reform, at which point the pre-KERA remuneration patterns re-emerge.
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Lowe, Jeremiah D., and Kirk W. Pomper. "(15) Evaluation of Genetic Variationin Pawpaw Cultivars using Simple Sequence Repeat Markers." HortScience 40, no. 4 (July 2005): 1067A—1067. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.40.4.1067a.

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Pawpaw [Asiminatriloba (L.) Dunal] is a tree fruit native to areas in the Midwest and Southeast United States. Since 1994, Kentucky State University (KSU) has served as the USDA National Clonal Germplasm Repository, or gene bank, for pawpaw; therefore, the assessment of genetic diversity in pawpaw is an important research priority for the KSU program. There are over 1800 pawpaw accessions (trees) from 16 different states and over 40 cultivars that are planted on 8 acres at the KSU farm. The objectives of this study were to develop microsatellite markers for pawpaw, and to then use those markers to evaluate 19 cultivars in the repository collection. Leaves of the pawpaw cultivar Sunflower were sent to Genetic Information Systems (Chatsworth, Calif.) for simple sequence repeat (SSR) primer and marker development. A total of 34 microsatellite primers were developed for pawpaw. These primers were then used in a preliminary screening with five pawpaw cultivars (`Sunflower', `Mitchell', `Sweet Alice', `Overleese', and `Prolific'). Results from this preliminary screening indicate that four of the primers failed to amplify any product, 12 primers were monomorphic, and 18 primers were polymorphic. Eleven additional cultivars were then screened, which produced numerous polymorphic products. For example, Primers B3 and B118 produced products ranging in size from 490 to 350 bp. Polymorphic products will be used to examine genetic variation among the pawpaw cultivars screened.
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McCarthy, Dennis M. P. "Politics and the African Development Bank. ByKaren A. Mingst · Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1990. xii + 204 pp. Tables, bibliography, and index. $26.00. ISBN 0-8131-1754-2." Business History Review 66, no. 1 (1992): 242–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3117091.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Bank of Kentucky"

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Londono, Ana Cristina. "Bank Instability Resulting From Rapid Flood Recession Along The Licking River, Kentucky." University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2004. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1100631346.

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Gillis, William. "The Scanlan's Monthly Story (1970-1971): How One Magazine Infuriated a Bank, an Airline, Unions, Printing Companies, Customs Officials, Canadian Police, Vice President Agnew, and President Nixon in Ten Months." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2005. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1593786429523054.

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Strange, Jason George. "Seeking Higher Ground| Contemporary Back-to-the-Land Movements in Eastern Kentucky." Thesis, University of California, Berkeley, 2016. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10075486.

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When I was growing up in the beautiful Red Lick Valley in eastern Kentucky, I saw many families practicing intensive subsistence production. They grew large gardens, raised chickens for eggs and meat, built their own homes, and fixed their own cars and trucks. On the Yurok Reservation, I again saw a profound and ongoing engagement with hunting, gathering, and crafting activities - and then encountered contemporary subsistence yet again when I visited my wife's childhood home in rural Ireland. When I began my graduate studies, however, I could find little reflection of these activities in either the scholarly record or popular media. When they were noticed at all, they were often targeted for stereotyped ridicule: contemporary homesteaders in the US were either remnant hippies from the `60s, or quaint mountain folks lost in time. I already knew that these stereotypes were misleading and insufficient. However, they also highlighted the lack of understanding of a genuinely puzzling phenomenon: why, in the heart of an advanced industrial nation, are so many people still embracing what is, in essence, peasant production? Using multiple research methods - including in-depth, semi-structured interviews, participant observation, surveys, and archival work - I have found that contemporary homesteading is not a window lingering open upon the past, but a thoughtful and serious attempt to respond to the present. It is best thought of as an unusual kind of social movement. Rather than attempting to foster change by modifying policy or reforming dominant institutions, homesteaders pursue change through a conscious reworking of the economic foundations of their lives. Barbara Epstein calls this a "prefigurative" strategy: it aims to directly manifest - to prefigure - ways of life and relationships that dissidents believe are more appropriate. Because they do not require the visible organizational armature and attention-grabbing strategies of more traditional social movements, prefigurative movements - like the back-to-the-land movement - have often been overlooked by researchers. Contemporary homesteading is also an unusual social movement in that it attracts participants from widely different socioeconomic backgrounds. In eastern Kentucky there is an acute cultural distinction between two groups, known to each other, somewhat pejoratively, as hicks and hippies. I have found that neither group is accurately described by the dismissive stereotypes to which they are often subjected. There is indeed a countercultural back-to-the-land movement in the research area that emerged originally out of the radical leftist ferment of the 1960s. But rather than representing a dwindling cohort of aging hippie communards, this movement is comprised of people of all ages; my research suggests that there are more back-to-the-landers in the area now than there were forty years ago. Moreover, it is a movement comprised of a multi-stranded left, in which participants are as likely to have been radicalized through, say, the Quaker tradition or Catholic liberation theology as through the Grateful Dead or Timothy Leary. The stereotype of the "hick" homesteaders is no more accurate. They are not simply country folks carrying on Appalachian subsistence traditions despite the fact that those traditions have lost all practical relevance. Many of them have lived in cities and worked modern jobs, and consciously embrace homesteading in response to those experiences. They, too, are part of a back-to-the-land movement, in the sense of having chosen to live a certain way as a strategy of resistance. The presence of two groups who embrace homesteading, and yet remain distinct and somewhat distanced from one another provides one of the most profound and difficult questions that my research confronts. While there are individuals who move freely between these two groups, in general they remain remarkably segregated - even when they live side by side along the same country road. What accounts for this cultural distance? Whatever the difference between "hick" and "hippie" homesteaders, it is not straightforward: nearly half of those who can clearly be identified as belonging to the group of "countercultural back-to-the-land homesteaders" are themselves from rural Appalachian families. By far, the single most consistent difference between these two groups is that one group is not only college educated, but actively and independently literate; members of the other group, with few exceptions, have not attended college and seldom read. But this finding begs another question: why should a difference in the practice of literate intellectuality stand at the heart of profound cultural differences that encompass everything from diet and diction to religious belief and political orientation? The answer is complicated, but it emerges from the recognition that a modern capitalist society is one in which people have profoundly different experiences in all aspects of their lives, from cradle to grave, based on their socioeconomic position. As children, they attend radically different kinds of schools, or are slotted into separate tracks within a given school. After they leave school they have access to different kinds of jobs - shelving products at Wal-Mart, say, versus teaching in a college classroom. When people spend decades of their lives working such jobs, they end up with such divergent life experiences that they might as well be living in different societies. These divided institutional experiences are reinforced in turn by sharp segregation and by the development of opposition to the culture of those in other socioeconomic positions. The command or lack of literate intellectuality plays multiple roles in shaping and sustaining these starkly distinct life experiences, perhaps most clearly by shaping how a particular individual moves through the positions provided by dominant institutions. Taken together, these dynamics culminate in a forceful process that I refer to as "capitalist ethnogenesis": a process of cultural differentiation within a single society, rather than through geographic separation within separate, non-interacting or weakly interacting societies. The homesteading movement contains two groups who turn to the rural landscape for answers to the problems of modern civilization - but how they perceive and interpret that civilization and its problems are markedly different. They are, in effect, responding to different modernities. They turn to homesteading as people indelibly marked by the system they dream of escaping.

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Books on the topic "Bank of Kentucky"

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Paul, Spencer. Coal Bank Hollow: Growin' up in eastern Kentucky. Bedford, Ind: JoNa Books, 2002.

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Kentucky. 1990 Kentucky bank laws annotated: Complete to September 1, 1990. Louisville, Ky: Kentucky Bankers Association, 1990.

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United States. Bureau of Labor Statistics. and Kentucky. Cabinet for Human Resources., eds. Kentucky occupational profiles, finance, insurance, and real estate. [Frankfort, Ky.]: Kentucky Cabinet for Human Resources, 1985.

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Robertson, John E. L. The history of Citizens Bank and Trust Company of Paducah, Kentucky: 1888-1988. [Paducah, Ky.]: J.E.L. Robertson, 1988.

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Walls, Ernest L. The Peoples First National Bank and Trust Company of Paducah, Kentucky: The bank that looks to the future recalls its past. Paducah, Ky: Turner Pub. Co., 1988.

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Blue is back: The University of Kentucky's 2009-10 basketball season. Neche, N.D: Friesens Corp., 2010.

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Returning son: From Bagdad, Kentucky to Baghdad, Iraq (and back). Bloomington, Ind: AuthorHouse, 2003.

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Stephen, Clements. Talking back: Kentucky high school students and their future education plans. Frankfort, Ky: Kentucky Long-Term Policy Research Center, 2001.

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Dew, Lee A. Owensboro, the city on the Yellow Banks: A history of Owensboro, Kentucky. Bowling Green, Ky: Rivendell Publications, 1988.

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Caroline, Gordon. None shall look back. Nashville, Tenn: J.S. Sanders & Co., 1992.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bank of Kentucky"

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Winford, Brandon K. "Black Business Activism in the Great Depression." In John Hervey Wheeler, Black Banking, and the Economic Struggle for Civil Rights, 31–73. University Press of Kentucky, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813178257.003.0003.

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Chapter 2 pivots away from NC Mutual by more closely examining M&F Bank after its establishment and its survival amid the catastrophic collapse that precipitated the Great Depression decade. The chapter argues that because M&F Bank followed an ethos that engendered a deep commitment to the overall prosperity of the black community, it was in a much better position than most black-owned banks to advocate a return to political participation for the black community. In this way, Durham’s black businesspeople served as stalwart community leaders, which provided a training ground for a younger cadre of well-educated and ready activists. Moreover, they embraced a multidimensional strategy of reciprocity—complicated by gender, class, and intergenerational tensions.
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Barksdale Clowse, Barbara. "Introduction." In A Doctor for Rural America, 1–5. University Press of Kentucky, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813179773.003.0001.

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On a cold spring morning in 1925 a stocky, smiling elderly woman stood on the bank of the raging Yaak River in northwest Montana. Coming toward her in a makeshift chair suspended from a zipline was a mother holding an infant. A small boy held tightly on from behind his mother. The family had come a long way seeking her help. She was Dr. Frances Sage Bradley. For a quarter century she had worked to spare the lives and health of women, their infants, and children. The doctor moved to the edge of the bank and snapped a photograph of the family to add to her massive collection. Then she helped them to safety and began her health conference....
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Hall, Joe B., Marianne Walker, and Rick Bozich. "Life After Coaching." In Coach Hall, 167–75. University Press of Kentucky, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813178561.003.0035.

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Joe B. describes his retirement activities, included fishing, working at a bank, broadcasting for games, and occasionally coaching. He begins coaching for Sekisui women’s basketball teams in Japan. He also discusses various medical issues, including a bout with colon cancer and heart troubles. Some years later he begins The Joe B. and Denny Show with Denny Crum. He then takes a moment to thank fans, assistants, and players for their loyalty and support.
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Potts, Gwynne Tuell. "George Rogers Clark." In George Rogers Clark and William Croghan, 31–45. University Press of Kentucky, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813178677.003.0004.

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George Rogers Clark, the son of middling Virginia gentry, escaped a short stint of education and fled to the eastern bank of the Ohio River at the age of nineteen. Trained as a surveyor, he made frequent trips to Fort Pitt, where he heard Croghan describe the land between the Appalachians and the Mississippi. Dunmore, Virginia’s last colonial governor and an investor in Croghan’s Illinois Land Company, began a series of skirmishes with trans-Appalachian American Indians to rid the territory of any cause that retarded settlement (and land sales). Clark, after riding with Dunmore against Cornstalk, moved to Kentucky and soon challenged the new Virginia Assembly to defend Kentucky from British and Indian raids or cede the territory to the people. He is credited with creating Kentucky County, Virginia.
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Even, General Jacob, and Colonel Simcha B. Maoz. "The Egyptian Attack, October 14." In At the Decisive Point in the Sinai, translated by Simcha B. Maoz and Moshe Tlamim. University Press of Kentucky, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813169552.003.0005.

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By the evening of October 12, reports surfaced of the Egyptians’ intent to dispatch commando units against various targets in order to attack the canal front and transfer armored reserves into Sinai. From that time until the October 14 sunrise, when nearly one thousand Egyptian tanks amassed on the eastern bank of the canal, the General Staff and Southern Command created a reserve force of around 750 tanks, deployed on the line from north to south. The ultimate goals of the Egyptian army’s offensive were lost to history when Egyptian president Anwar Sadat died, but Even and Maoz do their best to reconstruct the axes of the attack.
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Even, General Jacob, and Colonel Simcha B. Maoz. "Eight Days." In At the Decisive Point in the Sinai, translated by Simcha B. Maoz and Moshe Tlamim. University Press of Kentucky, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813169552.003.0010.

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By midday on October 17, the Egyptian army realized the extent of the presence of the IDF and began assembling armor and infantry on the western bank in an attempt to contain the bridgehead. By the original plan, the 421st Brigade was to seize the western bridgehead on Havit Road; however, due to the increased presence of Egyptian forces, the 421st Brigade withdrew slightly to regroup. On the morning of October 18, the 162nd Division planned to be at the bridgehead west of the canal, and then to break through to the west and southwest—a highly unrealistic goal, given the Southern Command’s progress in the previous two weeks.
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Runyon, Randolph Paul. "Curious, Elegant, and Useful Articles." In The Mentelles. University Press of Kentucky, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813175386.003.0012.

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This chapter describes commercial and cultural activity in Lexington between 1807 and 1817 as seen through the eyes of several visitors and contemporary newspapers. Waldemar opens his own "commission store," selling a wide range of items from groceries to household furnishings, alcohol, musical instruments, and toys. From 1808 to 1810, Charlotte teaches geography, astronomy, dancing, and French at Mary Beck's School. In 1817, Waldemar abandons the ups and downs of commerce for a steadier income as porter for the Lexington branch of the Second National Bank, through the intervention of Henry Clay. In the summer of 1820 Charlotte announces that she is opening her own school, Mentelle's for Young Ladies.
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Even, General Jacob, and Colonel Simcha B. Maoz. "The Crossing Battle, Part 3." In At the Decisive Point in the Sinai, translated by Simcha B. Maoz and Moshe Tlamim. University Press of Kentucky, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813169552.003.0008.

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This chapter focuses on the coordination of various moving parts to bring the crossing battle to completion. On the morning of October 16, the roller bridge was no longer seen as a viable option for crossing the canal, and Sharon commanded the 257th Battalion to detach from the 421st Brigade and go on to Matzmed. The Unifloat rafts were in good shape, and after their arrival at Akavish 55, the 630th Bridging Battalion was ordered to Matzmed to receive further instructions from Sharon. The Crocodile envoy arrived at Matzmed around 4 a.m. and commenced crossing to the western bank at 7 a.m. According to Even and Maoz, the Crocodile rafts saved Operation Stouthearted Men, the Israel Defense Forces, and Israel itself from a catastrophic defeat.
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Schmitz, David F. "Victory, Roosevelt’s Synthesis, and the Postwar World, 1944–1945." In The Sailor, 197–238. University Press of Kentucky, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813180441.003.0009.

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The success of the D-Day landing on June 6, 1944 began the last stage of World War II that culminated in victory in Europe in May 1945 and Asia in August 1945. While Roosevelt did not live to see the final victories, his actions in 1944 and early 1945 shaped much of the postwar period. The month after the landings at Normandy beach, forty-four nations met at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire where they established the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank for Reconstruction and Development. In August, delegates from around the world gathered at the Dumbarton Oaks Conference in Washington to begin the establishment of the United Nations. In February, 1945, the Big Three met again at Yalta to plan for the end of the war, occupation of Germany, and postwar peace.
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Cantor, Paul A. "The Talented Mr. Dukenfield." In Pop Culture and the Dark Side of the American Dream, 31–47. University Press of Kentucky, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813177304.003.0003.

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This chapter surveys W. C. Fields’s entertainment career, emphasizing his films, especially It’s a Gift and The Bank Dick. Fields lived the American dream, but he struggled enough to do so that he became acutely aware of its dark side. In an almost postmodern fashion, Fields was extremely self-conscious in his art and delighted in exposing its artificiality. His favorite role in his films was a con man. His films generally deal with men in uncomfortable domestic situations who turn to get-rich-quick schemes in a desperate attempt to escape the suffocating atmosphere of their homes. Fields gives his films happy endings, but they usually occur as a result of improbable turns in the plots, thus raising doubts about how realistic the successful resolutions truly are. Fields offers the paradox of an artist who provides lighthearted portrayals of the dark side of the American dream.
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Conference papers on the topic "Bank of Kentucky"

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David R Bohnhoff, Justin C Banach, Adam J Gardebrecht, Aaron J Lofy, Michael D Muehlbauer, Luke P Syse, Christofer A Sindunata, and Scott A Sanford. "Ice-Bank Air Conditioner for Fresh Produce Storage." In 2011 Louisville, Kentucky, August 7 - August 10, 2011. St. Joseph, MI: American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.13031/2013.38157.

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Loizias, Marcos. "Construction of the Lewis and Clark cable-stayed bridge over the Ohio River." In IABSE Congress, Christchurch 2021: Resilient technologies for sustainable infrastructure. Zurich, Switzerland: International Association for Bridge and Structural Engineering (IABSE), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2749/christchurch.2021.0103.

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<p>Constructed under a $780 million public private partnership contract (P3), the Lewis and Clark Bridge crosses the Ohio River at approximately 13Km northeast of downtown Louisville, Kentucky, and features a 695.1 m long three-span symmetrical steel composite cable-stayed bridge with a center span of 365.9 m. To meet an aggressive schedule required by the Concessionaire towards earlier collection of toll revenues, the construction of the bridge was accelerated by nearly one year through early staging of the superstructure steel grillage in both the back spans while completing construction of the towers. The steel grillage for the Kentucky backspan was stick-built, while for the Indiana backspan it was incrementally launched into position in a unique such application in a cable-stayed bridge project in the US. Following the simultaneous completion of the two backspans and the towers, the center span construction proceeded in balanced cantilever constructing the two tower cantilevers simultaneously. 104 stay-cables were erected and the center span steel grillage and the 695m long cable-stayed deck (over 800 precast panels) constructed in record time of only five months. The paper provides an overview of bridge structural system and characteristic structural details, and discusses the methods of construction for the substructure, towers, and the superstructure of the cable-stayed bridge.</p>
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Zhen Li, Ning Wang, and Tiansheng Hong. "RF Propagation Path-loss Patterns for ISM Band In-field WSN Agricultural Applications." In 2011 Louisville, Kentucky, August 7 - August 10, 2011. St. Joseph, MI: American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.13031/2013.37359.

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Akakpo, Carolyn. "Abstract 108: The Relationship Between Cervical Cancer and Women Living with Disabilities in Kentucky." In Abstracts: 9th Annual Symposium on Global Cancer Research; Global Cancer Research and Control: Looking Back and Charting a Path Forward; March 10-11, 2021. American Association for Cancer Research, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1538-7755.asgcr21-108.

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