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2020 ◽  
pp. 25-35
Author(s):  
Jim Host ◽  
Eric A. Moyen

This chapter describes Host’s return to Kentucky, where Garvice Kincaid recruited him to broadcast University of Kentucky football and basketball games alongside Walter “Dee” Huddleston for the Kentucky Central Radio Network. Host also served as a DJ on WVLK; in addition, he was required to sell radio advertising for the station. While on the road broadcasting, Host spent a good deal of time with Coach Adolph Rupp and other sports broadcasters, such as Cawood Ledford. After a couple of years on the radio, he accepted a sales position with Procter & Gamble in Chattanooga. He was quickly promoted to a larger market in Washington, DC, where he learned a great deal from mentor Mike Hostage. After a few years away, Host moved back to Lexington and got involved in multiple business ventures, including insurance, real estate, and home construction. Because of his various connections and civic activities, the Fayette County Republican Party recruited him to organize Senator John Sherman Cooper’s reelection campaign.


2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 94 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenliang Li

Impervious surface is the major component of urban areas, and it has been widely considered as the key for assessing the degree of urban sprawl. While the effectiveness of applying spectral mixture analysis (SMA) and spectral indices in mapping urban impervious surface has been proved, most studies have relied either on SMA or spectral indices without considering both. In this study, the SMA and spectral indices were integrated together to map impervious surfaces distributions in both Milwaukee County in the Wisconsin State and Fayette County in the Kentucky State. Specifically, spectral indices were used for identifying major land covers. Two-dimensional feature space plots were generated by calculated spectral indices images for endmember selection and extraction. Linear constrained SMA was finally applied to quantify the fractional impervious surfaces. Research results indicate that the proposed method has achieved a promising accuracy, and better performance was achieved in less developed areas than the developed areas. Moreover, a comparative analysis shows that the proposed method performs better than the conventional method in both the whole study area and the developed areas, and a comparable performance has been achieved in the less developed areas.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter J Rock ◽  
Michael D Singleton

Objective: The aim of this project was to investigate anecdotal reports of an increase in synthetic cannabinoid (SynCan) overdoses in Lexington-Fayette County area of Kentucky, using rapid surveillance systems including emergency department (ED) syndromic surveillance (SyS) and emergency medical services (EMS) data.Introduction: In mid-2017, the Kentucky Injury Prevention and Research Center (a bonafide agent of Kentucky Department for Public Health-KDPH) was alerted by members of KDPH to anecdotal evidence of a possible increase of SynCan (primarily “Serenity”) overdoses. The situation presented an opportunity to demonstrate the capabilities of syndromic surveillance and emergency medical services (EMS) data systems to provide rapid situational awareness about SynCan overdoses.Methods: SynCan cases were identified based on EMS emergency runs with narratives including mentions of ‘serenity|K2|spice’ and occurred in the Lexington-Fayette County. In ED SyS, SynCan cases were identified for Lexington-Fayette County area ED visits with a chief complaints of ‘serenity|K2|spice’ or diagnosis code of T40.7X[1-4]A. The ICD code was included after analysis of diagnosis codes in positive cases from a chief complaint only query revealed T40.7X[1-4]A as a primary code assigned in these cases. Trends for Lexington-Fayette County area were compared to state-wide total to determine if the trend is unique or related to system-wide pattern changes. EMS and ED SyS trend results were compared for internal validity. EMS incident addresses were geocoded to point-level to enable more granular analysis of geospatial patterns over time for identification of hotspots/clustering.Results: ED SyS and EMS results demonstrated a clear temporal increase in SynCan overdoses beginning around March of 2017[Fig 1]. Further analysis indicated that this increase was most dramatically centered in the Lexington-Fayette County area [Fig 2]. The vast majority of those overdosing were males (SyS: 88.1%) with average age 37 compared to 11.9% and 36.0 for females, respectively. These demographics are similar to those reported by the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene for a K2 outbreak in New York City in 20141. Kernel density mapping demonstrated a strong clustering in a specific area of downtown Lexington. Additionally, analysis of EMS data revealed that a large portion of these overdoses were being admitted for observational care and thus not being captured in SyS data (based on the primary hospital’s submission types).From a practical standpoint, the rapid surveillance results only took 1-2 days to complete and highlight the utility of these data systems in preparing rapid data products. The results of the analysis were shared with local and state health department authorities, including the local Emergency Medical Advisory Board. The geospatial analysis provided local authorities with information to enable precise targeting of public health and public safety messaging.Conclusions: By analyzing data from these systems, we were able to quickly identify the geographic areas and demographic groups that were most affected, and to describe trends in SynCan overdoses over time. As a result, we were able to provide highly-detailed data to local public health and public safety authorities to inform their response.


Author(s):  
Robert Bussel

This chapter describes the early lives and education of Harold Gibbons and Ernest Calloway. Gibbons was born on April 10, 1910, in Archibald Patch, a coal mining camp in the town of Taylor, Pennsylvania. He was the youngest of twenty-three children. Calloway was born on January 1, 1909, in Heberton, a tiny town in Fayette County, West Virginia. Both Gibbons and Calloway's fathers were coal miners, and their experiences reflected the influential role played by the coal industry in shaping America after the Civil War. This chapter considers the working conditions of miners, coal mine unions, and miners' attempts at union organizing in West Virginia and Pennsylvania during the time of Calloway and Gibbons. It also examines how the coal patch, ethnic and racial intolerance, and corporate domination converged as the catalysts for Calloway and Gibbons's subsequent efforts to craft a “total person unionism” that fostered interracial and interethnic solidarity.


Vaccine ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (16) ◽  
pp. 1909-1914 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeff Jones ◽  
Asheley Poole ◽  
Vivian Lasley-Bibbs ◽  
Mark Johnson

Plant Disease ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 97 (10) ◽  
pp. 1389-1389 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. A. Donald ◽  
C. M. Holguin ◽  
P. A. Agudelo

The lance nematode Hoplolaimus magnistylus Robbins 1982 (3) was found for the first time in Tennessee in a cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) field (35°19.550′ N, 89°24.535′ W) in Fayette County in May 2011. In June of the same year, the species was also found in soil samples collected from a corn (Zea mays L.) field (36°15.736′ N, 88°51.121′ W) and a soybean (Glycine max L.) field (36°15.616′ N, 88°51.118′ W) in Weakley County, TN. Nematodes were extracted from the soil with a semi-automatic elutriator and further processed by sugar flotation-centrifugation. Population densities were between 30 and 50 individuals per 100 cm3 of soil in areas with noticeable stunting. Helicotylenchus sp. and Pratylenchus sp. were also present at less than 10 individuals per 100 cm3 of soil. Ten soybean seeds, cv. Hutcheson, were planted and inoculated with 50 H. magnistylus per 100 cm3 in steam-sterilized soil, and were maintained in a greenhouse. Forty-five days later, soybean plants exhibited at least one of the following symptoms: stunting and chlorosis, reduced root growth, and localized root lesions. Individual nematodes were handpicked and identified under a compound light microscope as H. magnistylus based on morphological and morphometric characteristics. The main diagnostic character for this species is the size of the stylet. In the populations collected, females had stylets ranging from 49 to 58 μm (mean 56 μm). Males and females were observed with head distinctly set off and massive cephalic framework, stylet long and robust and stylet knobs pointed anteriorly. The lateral field was areolated and had four incisures most of the body length, the excretory pore was prominent and located 190 μm (175 to 200 μm) from anterior end, hemizonid was large and located one or two annules posterior to the excretory pore, phasmids were large, conspicuous, and variable in position, and vulva was prominent and near midbody. This species is most similar to the more commonly reported H. galeatus, but differs from it in the longer stylet. Total DNA was extracted from single adults from each soil sample and the species-specific primers Hoc-1f (5′-AACCTGCTGCTGGATCATTA-3′) and HM-3r (5′-AGACTGGACGGCCAAAGTT-3′) designed by Bae et al. (1) were used to confirm the identification by amplification of a distinct 340-bp amplicon that differentiates this species from H. columbus, H. galeatus, H. concaudajuvencus, and H. stephanus. H. magnistylus was first described from soil samples taken from a corn and soybean field in Marianna, AR (3), and has been reported in association with soybean and corn in Louisiana and Mississippi (4). Robbins (4) reported that H. magnistylus was not a serious pest of irrigated cotton in Arkansas, but there are no other pathogenicity studies published for soybean, corn, or non-irrigated cotton. Other lance species, mainly H. galeatus and H. columbus, have been reported to cause serious damage to cotton in the Carolinas and Georgia (3). Previously, H. galeatus was reported in Tennessee by Bernard (2). Lance nematodes feed as migratory endo- and ectoparasites and injure the growing points of roots, causing stunting of plants. Because so little is known about the pathogenicity of this nematode, it becomes relevant to add our records of its known distribution in field crops in the United States. To our knowledge, this is the first report of H. magnistylus in Tennessee. References: (1) C. H. Bae et al. Nematology 11:471, 2009. (2) E. C. Bernard. University of Tennessee Bulletin 594, 1980. (3) R. T. Robbins. J. Nematol. 14:500, 1982. (4) R. T. Robbins. J. Nematol. 30(4S):590, 1998.


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