MID AMERICA BANCORP/KY/
DEF 14A, 1998-03-19
STATE COMMERCIAL BANKS
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                           SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
                          Proxy Statement Pursuant to
             Section 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
                              (Amendment No. 1 )

Filed by the Registrant [ X ]

Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [   ]

Check the appropriate box:

[   ]  Preliminary Proxy Statement

[   ]  Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-
       6(e)(2)

[ X ]  Definitive Proxy Statement

[   ]  Definitive Additional Materials

[   ]  Soliciting Material Pursuant to Section 240.14a-11(c)
       or Section 240.14a-12

                    MID-AMERICA BANCORP
       (Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)



(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[ X ] No fee required.

[   ] Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1)
      and 0-11.

      1)  Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
_______________________________________________________________________________

      2)  Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
_______________________________________________________________________________

      3)  Per  unit  price or other underlying value  of  transaction  computed
pursuant to Exchange  Act  Rule  0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing
fee is calculated and state how it was determined):
_______________________________________________________________________________

      4)  Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
_______________________________________________________________________________

      5)  Total fee paid:
_______________________________________________________________________________

[  ]  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

[  ]  Check box if any part of the  fee  is  offset as provided by Exchange Act
Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which  the  offsetting fee was paid
previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration  statement number, or
the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

<PAGE>
      1) Amount Previously Paid:

         __________________________________________

      2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

         __________________________________________

      3) Filing Party:

         __________________________________________

      4) Date Filed:

         __________________________________________

<PAGE>
                         MIDAMERICA BANCORP
                          500 WEST BROADWAY
                      LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY 40202
               NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

TO THE SHAREHOLDERS:

     NOTICE  IS  HEREBY  GIVEN  that  the  Annual  Meeting  of Shareholders  of
MidAmerica Bancorp, a Kentucky corporation (the "Company"), will be held in the
William  Ray  Gallery  of  the  Kentucky Derby Museum at Churchill  Downs,  704
Central Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky  40208,  on April 16, 1998, at 10:00 a.m.,
Eastern Daylight time, for the following purposes:

     (1)   ELECTION OF DIRECTORS.  To elect six  directors in Class 1 for terms
           expiring at the 2001 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.

     (2)   AMENDMENT  TO  ARTICLES  OF  INCORPORATION.    To   require  certain
           transactions involving fundamental changes in corporate structure or
           the transfer of substantial assets to be approved by  a  75%  super-
           majority vote of shareholders.

     (3)   AMENDMENT TO ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION.  To elect to be governed  by
           the  board  approval  and  super-majority  voting  provisions of the
           Kentucky Business Combination Act.

     (4)   AMENDMENT TO ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION.  To require a super-majority
           vote  of shareholders to amend or repeal the foregoing  and  certain
           other provisions of the Articles of Incorporation.

     (5)   OTHER MATTERS.  To transact such other business as may properly come
           before the meeting or any adjournment thereof.

     Information regarding  the  matters  to  be  acted  upon at the meeting is
contained in the Proxy Statement accompanying this Notice.   Only  shareholders
of  record  at the close of business on February 20, 1998, will be entitled  to
notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting.

PLEASE COMPLETE, DATE AND SIGN THE ENCLOSED PROXY AND RETURN IT PROMPTLY IN THE
ENCLOSED POSTAGE  PAID  ENVELOPE.   IF  YOU ARE ABLE TO ATTEND THE  MEETING AND
WISH TO VOTE YOUR SHARES PERSONALLY, YOU MAY DO SO BY REVOKING THE PROXY AT ANY
TIME BEFORE IT IS EXERCISED.

                                            By Order of the Board of Directors
Louisville, Kentucky                                              Orson Oliver
   March 19, 1998
    
                                                    PRESIDENT
<PAGE>

                          MIDAMERICA BANCORP

                          500 WEST BROADWAY
                     LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY 40202

                          PROXY STATEMENT


                        GENERAL INFORMATION

     The proxy accompanying this Proxy Statement  is  being  solicited  by  the
Board  of  Directors  of   MidAmerica  Bancorp,  a  Kentucky  corporation  (the
"Company"),  for use in connection with the Annual Meeting of Shareholders (the
"Annual Meeting")  to  be held in the William Ray Gallery of the Kentucky Derby
Museum at Churchill Downs,  704  Central Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky 40208, at
10:00 a.m., Eastern Daylight time,  on  Thursday,  April  16,  1998, and at any
adjournments  thereof.  This Proxy Statement and accompanying proxy  are  first
being mailed to  shareholders  on or about March 19, 1998. The Company's Annual
Report  to  Shareholders  for  the year  ended  December  31,  1997,  including
consolidated financial statements, has been mailed separately to shareholders.

     Shares represented by proxies  in  the  accompanying  form received by the
Company properly signed and dated will be voted at the Annual  Meeting  or  any
adjournments  thereof  in  accordance  with  the instructions specified.  If no
instructions are given, the shares represented  by  the proxy will be voted FOR
the  nominees  for  director  named  below  in  this Proxy Statement,  for  the
amendments  to  the Articles of Incorporation set forth  below  in  this  Proxy
Statement and, in  the  discretion  of  the person(s) named in the accompanying
proxy or their substitutes, for any other matter that may be brought before the
Annual Meeting.  As of the date of this Proxy Statement, the Board of Directors
of the Company does not know of any other  matter  that may be presented at the
Annual  Meeting.  Pursuant  to the By-Laws of the Company,  the  proxy  may  be
revoked at any time, insofar  as  the  authority  granted  thereby has not been
exercised, by filing with the Secretary of the Company written  notice  of such
revocation  or  by executing and delivering to the Secretary a proxy bearing  a
later date.

     The cost of  solicitation  of  proxies  by  the Board of Directors will be
borne  by the Company.  The initial solicitation of  proxies  by  mail  may  be
supplemented  by  directors, officers and employees of the Company or its major
banking subsidiary,  Bank  of  Louisville  (the  "Bank"), by telephone or other
means of communication.  None of the directors, officers  or  employees

                                       1
<PAGE>

of the Company or the Bank will receive any additional compensation for any such
supplemental solicitation of proxies.  Proxy  materials may also be distributed
through brokers, custodians and other like parties  to the beneficial owners of
the Company's common stock, without par value ("Common Stock"), and the Company
will  reimburse  such parties for their reasonable out-of-pocket  and  clerical
expenses incurred in connection therewith.

     Only shareholders  of record at the close of business on February 20, 1998
(the "Record Date"), are  entitled  to  vote  at  the  Annual  Meeting  or  any
adjournments  thereof.  As of the Record Date, there were 9,890,490 outstanding
shares of Common  Stock.   Other than for the election of directors, each share
entitles its holder to one vote  on  all matters to be acted upon at the Annual
Meeting.  Shareholders  have  cumulative  voting  rights  in  the  election  of
directors.  In electing directors,  each  shareholder  has  the number of votes
equal to the number of shares held by him or her on the Record  Date multiplied
by the number of directors to be elected.  Each shareholder may cumulate his or
her votes and cast all such votes for one nominee or may distribute  such votes
among  as many nominees as he or she chooses. Shares represented by proxies  in
the accompanying  form  may  be  voted  cumulatively,  as discussed below under
"Election  of  Directors". The six nominees receiving the  most  votes  at  the
Annual Meeting will be elected directors.

     A majority  of  the  outstanding  shares  present in person or by proxy is
required to constitute a quorum to transact business  at  the  Annual  Meeting.
Abstentions  and  broker  non-votes will be treated as present for purposes  of
determining a quorum, but as  unvoted  shares  for  purposes of determining the
approval of any matter submitted to the shareholders  for  a  vote. Abstentions
and  broker  non-votes  will have no effect on matters decided by  a  plurality
vote, such as the election of directors.

                                       2
<PAGE>
                       PRINCIPAL SHAREHOLDERS

     Except as set forth  below,  the  Company  knows  of  no  shareholder  who
beneficially  owned  more  than 5% of the Company's outstanding Common Stock on
the Record Date, February 20, 1998.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME AND ADDRESS OF                NUMBER OF           PERCENTAGE
BENEFICIAL OWNER                   SHARES<F1>          OF CLASS<F1>
<S>                                <C>                 <C>
Bertram W. Klein                   2,046,028<F2>       20.69%
6403 Shrader Lane
LaGrange, Kentucky  40031
</TABLE>


______________________________
[FN]
<F1>  Based  upon information  furnished  to  the  Company  by  Mr.  Klein  and
      information  contained  in shareholder records of the Company.  Under the
      rules of the Securities and  Exchange  Commission,  a person is deemed to
      beneficially  own shares over which the person has or  shares  voting  or
      investment power  or  of  which  the  person  has  the  right  to acquire
      beneficial  ownership  within  60 days.  Unless otherwise indicated,  the
      person has sole voting and investment  power  with  respect to the shares
      shown for him.  The numbers shown include shares which  are not currently
      outstanding  but  of  which  the  named  person has the right to  acquire
      beneficial ownership within 60 days of the  Record Date.  Such shares are
      deemed to be outstanding for the purpose of computing  the  percentage of
      outstanding  shares  owned  by  the  named  person,  but  are  not deemed
      outstanding for the purpose of computing the percentage ownership  of any
      other person.
<F2>  Includes  the following shares beneficially owned by Mr. Klein: 1,114,575
      shares held  in trusts over which Mr. Klein has sole or shared voting and
      investment power  as  trustee  or  co-trustee;  226,394  shares  held  by
      entities  over  which  Mr.  Klein  has  sole voting and investment power;
      340,306 shares in which Mr. Klein shares voting power pursuant to powers-
      of-attorney; 103,000 shares held in a family limited partnership in which
      Mr. Klein shares voting power; 38,247 shares  held by Mr. Klein under the
      Company's 401(K) and Employee Stock Ownership Plan  ("ESOP")  at December
      31, 1996, the most current plan information available; and 22,182  shares
      which  Mr.  Klein  has  the  right to acquire pursuant to the exercise of
      options exercisable currently  or  within  60  days after the Record Date
      under the stock option plans of the Company. Also  includes 72,348 shares
      held by Mr. Klein's spouse, with respect to which Mr. Klein shares voting
      and investment power.


                         ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     The Board of Directors of the Corporation is divided into three classes --
for convenience denominated Class 1, Class 2, and Class 3  --  whose  terms  of
office  are  staggered  so  that  only  one

                                       3
<PAGE>

class of directors is elected at an annual meeting of shareholders. The term of
the  Directors  in  Class 1  expires  this year, and their successors are to be
elected at this Annual Meeting. The terms  of the Directors  in  the  other two
classes do not expire until  1999 and 2000,  and consequently  their successors
are  not  to  be elected at  this  Annual Meeting.  Pursuant to the Articles of
Incorporation, the Board of Directors has set the number of Directors for 1998
at 19.

     The nominees for Directors  in  Classes  1  and the Directors belonging to
Classes 2 and 3 whose terms of office will extend  beyond  the  Annual Meeting,
are  set forth on the following pages, together with information regarding  the
number  of  shares  of  the  Company's  Common  Stock owned by each, his or her
principal occupation during the past five years and  certain other information.
Information relating to the ownership of shares by the  Named  Officers  in the
Summary  Compensation Table, and all the directors and executive officers as  a
group, is also included.

     Each  of  the nominees for election as Director is currently a Director of
the Company. With  the exception of Mr. Jones, each of the nominees was elected
a director at the 1996  Annual Meeting of Shareholders. Mr. Jones was elected a
director at the June, 1997,  meeting  of the Board of Directors. Although it is
not anticipated that any of the nominees will decline or be unable to serve, if
that  should  occur, the persons named in  the  accompanying  proxy,  or  their
substitutes, may,  in  their  discretion,  vote  for  substitute  nominees.  In
addition, if any shareholder(s) shall vote shares cumulatively or otherwise for
the election of a director or directors other than the nominees named below, or
substitute  nominees,  the  persons  named  in the accompanying proxy, or their
substitutes, will have the discretionary authority  to  vote  cumulatively  for
some  number  less  than  all  of  the  nominees  named below or any substitute
nominees, and for such persons nominated as they may choose. All information is
presented as of the Record Date unless otherwise noted.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                               TOTAL SHARES
                                                                                                  & PERCENT
                                                                                               OF CLASS<F1>
<S>                                                                           <C>                    
NOMINEES FOR CLASS 1

ROBERT P. ADELBERG, 60, DIRECTOR SINCE 1975                                                           6,237
      Mr. Adelberg is the president of Robert Adelberg Companies, an
      insurance and real estate services organization in Louisville, Kentucky.

HON. MARTHA LAYNE COLLINS, 61, DIRECTOR SINCE 1988                                                      198
      Ms. Collins is the President of Martha L. Collins & Associates, an
      economic Development consulting firm in Lexington, Kentucky. She is
      also the Director of International Business & Management Center at the
      University of Kentucky. She was previously the President of St.
      Catherine College.  Ms. Collins is the former Governor of the Common-
      wealth of Kentucky.

                                       4

<PAGE>
                                                                                               TOTAL SHARES
                                                                                                  & PERCENT
                                                                                               OF CLASS<F1>
                                                                                                    

R. K. GUILLAUME, 54, DIRECTOR SINCE 1995                                                         30,522<F2>
      Mr. Guillaume is Chief Executive Officer and Vice Chairman of the
      Company.  He is the former president of Bank One, Kentucky, in
      Louisville, Kentucky.

DAVID JONES, JR., 40, DIRECTOR SINCE 1997                                                               103
      Mr. Jones is the Managing Director of Chrysalis Ventures, Inc., a
      private equity management company in Louisville, Kentucky since 1994.
      Prior to that he was associated with the law firm of Hirn, Reed &
      Harper.


    
   BERTRAM W. KLEIN (3), 67, DIRECTOR SINCE 1967
    
                                           2,046,028-20.69%
      Mr. Klein is the Chairman of the Board of Directors, and until                                   <F3>
      October, 1995, Chief Executive Officer, of the Company.

BRUCE J. ROTH, 53, DIRECTOR SINCE 1994                                                           62,305<F4>
      Mr. Roth is a certified public accountant and a partner in the firm of
      Louis T. Roth, CPA., in Louisville, Kentucky.

CONTINUING DIRECTORS

DIRECTORS IN CLASS 2:

JAMES E. CAIN, 59, DIRECTOR SINCE 1996                                                                  158
      Mr. Cain serves as Chairman of the Board of Trustees and
      Business Manager of Plumbers Local Union 107, Louisville,
      Kentucky. He also serves as Secretary/Treasurer of the Kentucky
      Pipe Trades Association.

DONALD G. MCCLINTON, 64, DIRECTOR SINCE 1980                                                     11,510<F5>
      Mr. McClinton is an investor and the owner of Skylight Thoroughbred
      Training Centers, Inc. He is the former Chairman of Interlock Indus-
      tries, Inc., a manufacturing and transportation services company.

JEROME J. PAKENHAM, 62, DIRECTOR SINCE 1995                                                       2,818<F6>
      Mr. Pakenham is the Chief Financial Officer for the Archdiocese
      of Louisville.

JOHN S. PALMORE, 80, DIRECTOR SINCE 1983                                                                402
      Judge Palmore is a retired Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of
      Kentucky.  After his retirement and until 1995, he practiced law
      with the firm of Jackson & Kelly in Lexington, Kentucky.

                                       5
<PAGE>
                                                                                               TOTAL SHARES
                                                                                                  & PERCENT
                                                                                              OF CLASS <F1>

WOODFORD R. PORTER, SR., 79, DIRECTOR SINCE 1981                                                      2,383
      Mr. Porter is the President and Chief Executive Officer of A.D.
      Porter & Sons, a funeral services company in Louisville, Kentucky.

RAYMOND L. SALES, 75, DIRECTOR SINCE 1986                                                         4,683<F7>
      Mr. Sales is an attorney, serving of counsel to the firm of Segal,
      Isenberg, Sales, Stewart, Cutler & Tillman in Louisville, Kentucky.
      Prior to July 31, 1997, he was a partner at that firm.

DIRECTORS IN CLASS 3:

LESLIE D. ABERSON, 61, DIRECTOR SINCE 1983                                                       20,678<F8>
      Mr. Aberson is a partner in the law firm of Rothschild, Aberson,
      Miller & Goodin in Louisville, Kentucky.

WILLIAM C. BALLARD, JR., 57, DIRECTOR SINCE 1991                                                 13,897<F9>
      Mr. Ballard is of counsel to the law firm of Greenebaum Doll & Mc-
      Donald, PLLC, in Louisville, Kentucky. He served previously as Execu-
      tive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Humana, Inc., an
      integrated health care services company.

PEGGY ANN MARKSTEIN, 47, DIRECTOR SINCE 1992                                                     8,879<F10>
      Ms. Markstein is the Assistant Prosecuting Attorney for the Butler
      County Prosecutor's Office in Hamilton, Ohio.

ORSON OLIVER, 54, DIRECTOR SINCE 1979                                                           94,280<F11>
      Mr. Oliver is the President of the Company.

BENJAMIN K. RICHMOND, 54, DIRECTOR SINCE 1993                                                           115
      Mr. Richmond is the President of the Louisville Urban League in
      Louisville, Kentucky.

HENRY C. WAGNER, 55, DIRECTOR SINCE 1989                                                                786
      Mr. Wagner is the President and Chief Executive Officer of Jewish
      Hospital Healthcare Services, Inc., a medical services corporation in
      Louisville, Kentucky.

NON-DIRECTOR NAMED OFFICERS:

Gail W. Pohn                                                                                    36,740<F12>
Robert H. Sachs                                                                                 40,208<F12>
Steven A. Small                                                                                 23,700<F12>

                                       6
<PAGE>

                                                                                               TOTAL SHARES
                                                                                                  & PERCENT
                                                                                               OF CLASS<F1>


    
   All Directors and Executive Officers as a group (29 in number, including the            2,874,682-29.07%
above)
    
                                                                                                <F13>
</TABLE>


______________________________
[FN]
<F1>  Total  Shares  are  based  on  the  beneficial  ownership  rules  of  the
      Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  as  described  in  footnote  1  to
      PRINCIPAL  SHAREHOLDERS.  Unless otherwise indicated, the  named  persons
      have sole voting  and  investment  power with respect to the shares shown
      for them.  Percentage ownership is based  on 9,890,490 shares outstanding
      as of February 20, 1998, the Record Date for  the  Annual Meeting. Shares
      of  Common Stock subject to options exercisable within  60  days  of  the
      Record  Date are deemed outstanding for computing the percentage of class
      of the person  holding  such  options  but are not deemed outstanding for
      computing the percentage of class for any  other person. Unless otherwise
      indicated, ownership is less that one percent.  Holdings  do  not include
      shares  that may be acquired in the future pursuant to the provisions  of
      the Non-employee Directors Deferred Compensation Plan. As of December 31,
      1997, the  following  directors  have chosen to participate in this Plan:
      Leslie D. Aberson, Donald G. McClinton,  Jerome  J.  Pakenham,  Bruce  J.
      Roth, Raymond L. Sales, and Henry C. Wagner.
<F2>  Includes  26,522  shares  which  Mr. Guillaume may purchase under options
      granted under the Company's stock  option  plans  which  are  exercisable
      currently  or  within  60  days after the Record Date. Also includes  788
      shares held by Mr. Guillaume  under  the  Company's  ESOP at December 31,
      1996, the most current plan information available.
<F3>  See footnote 2 to PRINCIPAL SHAREHOLDERS for a description  of the shares
      beneficially  owned  by  Mr. Klein. Mr. Klein's sons, David N. Klein  and
      Richard B. Klein, are executive officers of the Company.
<F4>  Includes 1,928 shares held  by  Mr.  Roth's  spouse  as to which Mr. Roth
      shares voting and investment power and 1,706 shares held by a minor child
      as  to  which  Mr.  Roth has voting and investment power.  Also  includes
      32,696 shares held in  trust  as  to  which  Mr.  Roth  shares voting and
      investment power, and 19,418 shares held in partnerships  as to which Mr.
      Roth has voting and investment power. Also includes 4,094 shares  held by
      adult children for which Mr. Roth disclaims beneficial ownership.
<F5>  Includes  6,257  shares  held  by Mr. McClinton's spouse, as to which Mr.
      McClinton shares voting and investment power.
<F6>  Includes  1,421 shares held by Mr.  Pakenham  and  his  spouse  as  joint
      tenants, as to which Mr. Pakenham shares voting and investment power.
<F7>  Includes 1,437  shares  held  by  Mr. Sales' spouse as to which Mr. Sales
      shares voting and investment power.
<F8>  Includes 5,406 shares held in trust over which Mr. Aberson has voting and
      investment  power.  Also includes 9,071  shares  held  by  Mr.  Aberson's
      spouse, as to  which  shares  Mr.  Aberson  shares  voting and investment
      power.

                                       7
<PAGE>

<F9>  Includes 12,523 shares held in trusts with respect to  which  Mr. Ballard
      serves as trustee with the power to vote and invest such shares.
<F10> Includes 1,870 shares held by Ms. Markstein as custodian for her children
      and 51 shares held by the spouse of Ms. Markstein.
<F11> Includes  24,329  shares  held by Mr. Oliver under the Company's ESOP  at
      December 31, 1996, the most  current  plan  information  available.  Also
      includes  64,471  shares  which  Mr.  Oliver may purchase under   options
      granted under the Company's stock option  plans and exercisable currently
      or within 60 days after the Record Date.
<F12> Represents  shares  which  Messrs. Pohn, Sachs  and  Small  may  purchase
      pursuant to options granted  under  their  employment agreements with the
      Company  and  under  the  Company's stock option  plans  and  exercisable
      currently or within 60 days  after  the  Record  Date. This also includes
      2,968 shares held by Mr. Pohn, 2,876 shares held by  Mr. Sachs, and 2,462
      shares held by Mr. Small  under the Company's ESOP at  December 31, 1996,
      the  most  current  information available. (These numbers include  shares
      represented by Company contributions not yet vested.)
<F13> Includes 641,012 shares  which may be purchased by all Executive Officers
      as a group under options granted  pursuant to employment contracts and/or
      the  Company's  stock option plans which  are  exercisable  currently  or
      within 60 days after  the  Record  Date. Also included are 322,240 shares
      attributable to Stanley L. Atlas. Mr.  Atlas  was  a  director  as of the
      Record  Date.  His term expires at the Annual Meeting and he has notified
      the Company that  he chooses not to stand for reelection. Included in the
      shares attributable  to  him  are  9,634 shares held by Mr. Atlas and his
      spouse  as  joint  tenants,  as to which  Mr.  Atlas  shares  voting  and
      investment power, 145,707 shares  held  in  a family limited partnership,
      and 120,105 shares held by the spouse of Mr.  Atlas either directly or as
      trustee. Mr. Atlas' spouse is a first cousin of  Bertram  W.  Klein.  Mr.
      Atlas  and his spouse have granted a proxy to Bank management pursuant to
      an Agreement  to  vote  their  shares  and  have granted a right of first
      refusal to the Bank and its Chairman prior to disposing of such shares to
      any third party.


INFORMATION CONCERNING THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

     DIRECTORS' COMPENSATION.  Directors who are not  officers  of  the Company
are  paid  a  fee  of  $1,000 for attendance at each meeting and $100 for  non-
attendance.  Directors who  are  also officers are not paid any fee for serving
as  a  director or attending any meetings.  Under  the  Company's  Non-employee
Directors Deferred Compensation Plan, non-employee Directors may elect to defer
director's  fees  into  a  participant  account  that includes a deferred stock
account (consisting of shares of Common Stock of the Company) and/or a deferred
cash account (which bears interest at the Bank's prime  rate).  Deferrals  into
the  deferred  stock account are credited at the rate of 110% of the applicable
fee. Amounts deferred  are  payable, in stock or cash, as the case may be, upon
the earlier of the date selected  by  the participant, the date the participant
ceases to be a director or 60 days following  a  "Change  in  Control"  of  the
Company, as defined in the plan.

     MEETINGS OF THE BOARD.  During 1997, the Board of Directors of the Company
held  12  regularly  scheduled  meetings and one annual organizational meeting.
Each director of the Company attended  at  least  75% of the aggregate of:  (1)
the total number of meetings of the Board of Directors  held  during the period
for  which  he  or  she has served as a director; and (2) the total

                                       8
<PAGE>

number of  meetings held by all committees of the  Board  of Directors on which
the director served in 1997.

     BOARD COMMITTEES.  The Board of Directors has an Audit Committee, Planning
and Management Committee  and  Nominating Committee, each of which is comprised
solely of non-employee directors.

     The Audit Committee consists  of William C. Ballard, Jr., Jerome Pakenham,
Donald  G.  McClinton,  David Jones, Jr.,  and  Henry  C.  Wagner.   The  Audit
Committee recommends to the  Board  of  Directors the engagement of independent
auditors for the Company (and the Bank),  reviews  the  reports  of  regulatory
examiners  and  independent  auditors,  reviews reports concerning the internal
control structure and other similar matters,   and makes recommendations to the
Board of Directors as may be appropriate.  The Audit  Committee held 5 meetings
during 1997.

     The Planning and Management Committee consists of Raymond L. Sales, Leslie
D. Aberson, William C. Ballard, Jr., James E. Cain, Martha Layne Collins, Bruce
J.  Roth,  and Henry C. Wagner. This Committee functions  as  the  compensation
committee of the Board  to review the compensation of executive officers of the
Company and  to  prepare  recommendations  and  periodic  reports  to the Board
concerning  such matters.  This committee is also responsible for administering
the Company's   Incentive  Stock Option Plan. In addition, this Committee works
with Company management regarding  strategic  planning issues. The Planning and
Management Committee met 3 times during 1997.

     The  Nominating Committee consists of Robert  P.  Adelberg,  Martha  Layne
Collins,  Judge  John  Palmore  and  Benjamin  K.  Richmond.  The duties of the
Nominating  Committee   include seeking qualified and  capable  individuals  to
serve on the Company's Board  of  Directors.   The  Committee will consider for
nomination   as   directors   persons   recommended   by  shareholders.    Such
recommendations must be in writing and delivered to the  Nominating  Committee,
MidAmerica  Bancorp,  500  West  Broadway,  Louisville,  Kentucky  40202.   The
Nominating Committee met once during 1997.

     Directors  of the Company hold directorships in other companies registered
under Section 12  or  subject  to  the  requirements  of  Section  15(d) of the
Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, or registered as an investment company  under
the Investment  Company  Act of 1940, as follows: William C. Ballard, Jr., is a
director of LG&E Energy Corp.,  United  Healthcare Corp., Atria Corp., American
Safety Razor, Healthcare, REIT and Health Recoveries, Inc. Martha Layne Collins
is a director of the Eastman Kodak Company  and  R. R. Donnelly & Sons Company.
Donald G. McClinton is a director of Caretenders, Inc.

                                       9

<PAGE>


                        EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

     The  following Summary Compensation Table shows  compensation  information
for Mr. Bertram  W.  Klein, Chairman, R. K. Guillaume, Chief Executive Officer,
and four other Executive  Officers,  as  of  year-end  1997,  who were the most
highly compensated in 1997 (the Named Officers).


                      SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                             LONG-TERM
                                    ANNUAL COMPENSATION                    COMPENSATION
<S>                          <C>       <C>             <C>              <C>                <C>
                                                                               STOCK
                                                                              OPTIONS           ALL OTHER
NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION  YEAR               SALARY         BONUS<F1>  (IN SHARES)      COMPENSATION<F2>

Bertram W. Klein             1997             $420,000         $133,896       12,360             $24,918
  Chairman of the Board      1996              400,000          111,600        - 0 -              28,143
                             1995              400,000            - 0 -       10,300              17,614

R. K. Guillaume              1997             $400,000         $127,520       12,360              $7,776
  Chief Executive Officer    1996              365,000          101,835       25,750              10,259
                             1995              *84,231            - 0 -         - 0 -             - 0 -

Orson Oliver                 1997             $315,000         $100,422        6,180             $13,632
  President                  1996              315,000           87,885        - 0 -              13,969
                             1995              267,305            - 0 -       10,300              16,923

Gail W. Pohn                 1997             $167,000          $53,240        6,025             $21,114
  Executive Vice President   1996              160,603           44,808        - 0 -              18,796
                             1995              155,925            - 0 -       10,300              20,390

Robert H. Sachs              1997             $167,000          $53,240        6,025             $11,757
  Executive Vice President   1996              162,982           45,472        - 0 -              16,774
                             1995              158,235            - 0 -       10,300              14,482

Steven A. Small              1997             $174,000          $55,471        6,165             $17,451
  Executive Vice President & 1996              164,285           45,836        - 0 -              14,639
  Chief Financial Officer    1995              159,500            - 0 -       10,300              14,180

</TABLE>

* Employed only part of 1995.
__________________________________
[FN]
<F1>  The  amounts  shown  in  this column represent amounts earned  under  the
      Company's  Management Incentive  Compensation  Plan,  pursuant  to  which
      Senior Vice  Presidents,  Executive  Vice  Presidents and other executive
      officers of the Company and the Bank are eligible to receive a cash award
      based  upon  performance  criteria  established   by   the   Plan.   (See
      Compensation  Committee  Report  on

                                      10
<PAGE>

      Executive Compensation). The bonuses reflected in this chart were paid in
      1998 based upon 1997 performance.
<F2>  Amounts in this column include:
      (a)  Contributions by the Company to the  Company's  401(K)  and Employee
      Stock  Ownership  Plan, a defined contribution plan (ESOP), on behalf  of
      the Named Officers.   All  employees of the Company who have attained age
      20-1/2 and who have been credited  with  500  hours  of service in a six-
      month  period  with  the  Company or the Bank are generally  eligible  to
      participate in the ESOP.  Participants  may  elect  to  have  2% to 5% of
      their  pre-tax  compensation  contributed  to  the  ESOP with the Company
      contributing an amount of up to 4-1/2% of the participant's compensation.
      Also   includes   Company  contributions  under  the  Company's   Benefit
      Restoration Plan, a  defined  benefit  plan  intended to restore benefits
      unavailable to participants as a result of certain  Internal Revenue Code
      limits on qualified plan benefits.
      (b)  Amounts paid to the following Named Officers under  the  Bank's Key-
      Per  Plan  during  1997,  as follows:  Mr. Klein, $5,632, and Mr. Oliver,
      $5,856.  The Key-Per Plan is  an  unfunded  employee welfare benefit plan
      available to certain employees in the position  of  Senior Vice President
      or more senior office.  After participants have held the office of Senior
      Vice  President  or  higher with the Bank for 10 years,  the  participant
      begins to receive equal  monthly  payments from the Key-Per Plan over the
      next 10 years, provided the participant  remains  employed  by  the  Bank
      during such period.  There have been no participants added to the Key-Per
      Plan since 1986.
      (c)  For  Mr.  Pohn,  $6,000  pursuant to an employment contract. For Mr.
      Small $5,000 pursuant to an agreement to forego a contractual right.


                         OPTION GRANTS IN 1997

     The following table sets forth information as to the stock options granted
to the Named Officers during 1997 pursuant  to  the  Company's  Incentive Stock
Option Plan.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     POTENTIAL REALIZABLE
                                           PERCENTAGE OF                            VALUE AT ASSUMED ANNUAL
                                           TOTAL OPTIONS                             RATES OF STOCK PRICE
                                            GRANTED TO    EXERCISE                     APPRECIATION FOR
                               OPTIONS     EMPLOYEES IN     PRICE     EXPIRATION         OPTION TERM <F2>
NAME                         GRANTED<F1>    FISCAL 1997   ($/SHARE)      DATE
<S>                         <C>           <C>            <C>         <C>           <C>         <C>
                                                                                         5%         10%
Bertram W. Klein                   12,360       25%         21.87      3/17/2002      $ 43,291   $125,416
R. K. Guillaume                    12,360       25%         19.88      3/17/2007       154,530    391,609
Orson Oliver                        6,180       13%         19.88      3/17/2007        77,265    195,805
Gail W. Pohn                        6,025       12%         19.88      3/17/2007        75,327    190,894
Robert H. Sachs                     6,025       12%         19.88      3/17/2007        75,327    190,894
Steven A. Small                     6,165       13%         19.88      3/17/2007        77,077    195,329
</TABLE>

                                      11
<PAGE>
______________________________________
[FN]
<F1>  The  exercise price of each of the options is equal to the closing  price
      of the  Company's  Common  Stock  in  the  American  Stock Exchange, Inc.
      ("AMEX") reported consolidated trading on the date of  grant.  The number
      of options and the exercise price shown have been adjusted to reflect the
      effect of a stock dividend in 1997 after the grant of the options.
<F2>  Based on actual option term and annual compounding, without regard to the
      taxes associated with gains upon option exercises.  These amounts  assume
      the stated rates of appreciation will be realized.  Actual gains, if any,
      are dependent upon the future performance of the Company's Common Stock.


                    AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN
              LAST FISCAL YEAR AND FISCAL YEAR-END VALUES

     The  following  table  provides information about options exercised during
1997, and the unexercised options  held  at  December  31,  1997  by  the Named
Officers.  None  of  the  Named  Officers  exercised  stock appreciation rights
("SARs")  during 1997 or held SARs at the fiscal year-end.  The  value  of  the
unexercised  options is calculated based on the difference between the exercise
price and the  closing  price  of  Common  Stock  as  of  December 31, 1997, as
reported by the AMEX consolidated transaction reporting system ($33.625).

                                      12

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      NUMBER OF SECURITIES
                                                     UNDERLYING UNEXERCISED        VALUE OF UNEXERCISED
                                                         OPTIONS HELD AT         IN-THE-MONEY OPTIONS/SARS
                                                         FISCAL YEAR-END            AT FISCAL YEAR-END($)
<S>                   <C>              <C>             <C>           <C>             <C>             <C>
                      SHARES
                    ACQUIRED ON       VALUE
      NAME          EXERCISE(#)    REALIZED($)   *EXERCISABLE   UNEXERCISABLE   EXERCISABLE   UNEXERCISABLE
Bertram W. Klein      11,254         $178,606        22,182         12,360        $368,202      $145,045
R. K. Guillaume        - 0 -            - 0 -        26,522         12,360         435,889       169,641
Orson Oliver           3,000           30,799        64,471          6,180       1,337,958        84,821
Gail W. Pohn           - 0 -            - 0 -        33,772          6,025         633,451        82,693
Robert H. Sachs        - 0 -            - 0 -        33,772          6,025         622,323        82,693
Steven A. Small       12,700          150,672        20,693          6,165         365,837        84,601
</TABLE>

__________________________________
*     Represents the difference between the market value of  the  Common  Stock
      (or  the  sale  price if shares were sold) on the day of exercise and the
      option exercise price.

RETIREMENT PLAN

     The  Company's  non-contributory  defined  benefit  Retirement  Plan  (the
"Plan") originated on September 1, 1963 (as the Bank's Retirement Plan prior to
formation of the Company  in 1983) and has been amended several times to comply
with governmental regulations  and to reflect other changes made since the Plan
was adopted.  All full time employees  of  the  Company  and  the Bank who have
attained age 20-1/2 and who have been credited with 500 hours of  service  in a
six month period with the Company or the Bank, and part time employees who have
completed 1,000 hours of service in the previous 12 month period, are generally
eligible to participate in the Plan.

     The  table  set  forth  below  shows the estimated annual benefits payable
following retirement at age 65 to persons  in  specified remuneration and years
of participation classifications under the Plan.   A  portion  of  the benefits
shown below will be paid from the Company's Benefit Restoration Plan, a defined
benefit  plan  intended  to restore benefits unavailable to participants  as  a
result of certain Internal Revenue Code limits on qualified plan benefits.

                                      13

<PAGE>

PENSION PLAN TABLE

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                     YEARS OF SERVICE
<S>                <C>                <C>               <C>               <C>              <C>

REMUNERATION                 15 YEARS          20 YEARS          25 YEARS         30 YEARS         35 YEARS
    $125,000                  $27,765           $37,020           $46,275          $55,530          $64,785
     150,000                   33,390            44,520            55,650           66,780           77,910
     175,000                   39,015            52,020            65,025           78,030           91,035
     200,000                   44,640            59,520            74,400           89,280          104,160
     225,000                   50,265            67,020            83,775          100,530          117,285
     250,000                   55,890            74,520            93,150          111,780          130,410
     300,000                   67,140            89,520           111,900          134,280          156,660
     400,000                   89,640           119,520           149,400          179,280          209,160
     450,000                  100,890           134,520           168,150          201,780          235,410
     500,000                  112,140           149,520           186,900          224,280          261,660
</TABLE>

     Covered compensation  includes base salary.  If an employee retires at the
later  of age 65 or the employee's  fifth  anniversary  of  participation,  the
employee  will be entitled to a monthly pension payable for life with a minimum
of 120 guaranteed  payments  equal to the product of:  (1) the sum of 1% of the
first  $400  of  the  employee's  average   monthly  compensation  (highest  10
consecutive years) plus 1-1/2% of the employee's  average  monthly compensation
in excess of $400, multiplied by (2) the employee's years of  credited  service
(up  to  35 years).  Employees with more than 35 years of credited service  are
entitled to  additional  monthly  payments  equal  to  1-1/2% of the employee's
average  monthly compensation multiplied by the employee's  years  of  credited
service in  excess of 35 years.  The benefits as determined above and as listed
in the pension  table  are  not subject to any deduction for Social Security or
other offset amounts.

     As of December 31, 1997,  the  Named  Officers in the Summary Compensation
Table  who  participate in the Retirement Plan  had  the  following  number  of
complete years  of  accredited  service:  Bertram  W.  Klein,  44  years; R. K.
Guillaume, 2 years; Orson Oliver, 22 years; Steven A. Small, 4 years; Robert H.
Sachs, 5 years; and Gail W. Pohn, 5 years.

EMPLOYMENT CONTRACTS, TERMINATION AND
CHANGE IN CONTROL ARRANGEMENTS

     The Company and the Bank have employment agreements with R. K.  Guillaume,
Orson  Oliver,  Robert  H.  Sachs,  Steven  A.  Small  and  Gail W. Pohn. These
agreements  were  entered  into  in  1995. Mr. Guillaume was employed  as  Vice
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of  the  Company and the Bank. Pursuant to
his agreement, he receives a base annual salary of $365,000 and participates in
the  benefit  plans  of  the  Company.  If  he is unable  to  work  because  of
disability,  he  will receive 50% of base salary,  continued  coverage  in  the
medical, dental, hospitalization and life insurance programs of the Company and
continued accrual  of credited service under the Pension Plan of the Company to
age 65. Mr. Guillaume will receive his base pay and the continuation of

                                      14
<PAGE>

certain  benefits  for  36 months  if  he is  terminated  without  cause  or is
constructively  terminated without cause.  If such termination follows a change
in control, he will receive such payments in a lump sum without discount.

     The  agreement  with Mr. Oliver provides  for  a  base  annual  salary  of
$315,000 and terms otherwise  similar  to  that of Mr. Guillaume, plus $125,000
upon the completion of 5 years service and $25,000  per  year  for  each of the
following three years, provided he remains employed.

     The  agreement  with  Mr.  Sachs  incorporates  the provisions of his  old
agreement which expires on December 31, 1998, including  the  grant  of  34,954
stock  appreciation rights that upon a change in control prior to December  31,
1998 (and  presuming  continued  employment), are converted into stock options.
The current agreement provides, in  addition, for the payment of a sum equal to
two years' pay at the conclusion of its  term,  and,  if  there  is a change in
control during its term, the grant of such years of credited service  to  bring
his total years of credited services for pension purposes to 15.

     Mr.  Pohn  and  Mr.  Small  have  agreements  expiring  in  2003 and 2008,
respectively.  If  they  are terminated (or constructively terminated)  without
cause, they will receive salary  payments and health insurance coverage for the
length  of the extension period. If  the  termination  is  after  a  change  in
control,  they will receive, in addition, retirement benefits as if they had 15
years of credited service.

                        COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
                   REPORT ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

     The Planning  and  Management  Committee  of  the  Board  of  Directors is
comprised  of  the  seven  non-employee  directors  named below.  The principal
duties of the committee are to review the compensation of executive officers of
the Company and to prepare recommendations and periodic  reports  to  the Board
concerning  such  matters.  The Planning and Management Committee has furnished
the following report relating to executive compensation during 1997.

     The Company's  Compensation Program for its executive officers consists of
base salary, the opportunity  to earn an annual performance-based bonus and the
ability to receive discretionary  stock  option awards.  Each of these elements
of compensation is discussed below.

     Base Salary.  Base salary levels are established by this Committee and the
other forms of compensation are fixed as described  below.   In  general,  base
salary  levels  are  set at the minimum levels believed by this Committee to be
sufficient to attract  and retain qualified executives when considered with the
components of the Company's compensation structure.

     Incentive Compensation.   The  Committee  believes  that  a  portion of an
executive officer's cash compensation should be subject to specific performance
criteria.   To  accomplish  this  objective,

                                      15
<PAGE>

the  Company,  in  1996,  adopted  a  Management  Incentive  Compensation  Plan
(the  "Bonus  Plan").   The  Bonus  Plan  is intended  to  provide an immediate
recognition  of managerial efforts through a cash bonus or award  tied  to  the
financial  performance  of the Company.  An annual award is based on the annual
increase in Earnings Per Share for the award  period over the previous period.
A three-year award is based on (i)  the three-year average increase in Earnings
Per Share, (ii) the three-year average Return on Average  Assets, and (iii) the
three-year average Return on Equity. The Bonus Plan is open to participation by
Executive Vice Presidents and above, Senior Vice Presidents and Vice Presidents
of the  Company and the Bank.  The aggregate  amount of cash award for a fiscal
year  is  calculated  for  each  of  the aforementioned  groups  according to a
schedule comparing the relevant  increases  or  results for the Award Period to
a predetermined performance standard.  When an increase or  result  is above or
below the target performance standard, the actual award fund is adjusted upward
or downward from the target award.  The aggregate amount of the annual award is
apportioned between  corporate performance  and  individual performance for the
groups below Executive Vice President.  The individual performance  portion  is
discretionary with the Committee and is 25% of the annual award for Senior Vice
Presidents and 50% of the annual award for Vice Presidents.

     Stock Option Program.   The  Company  has adopted the 1995 Incentive Stock
Option Plan.  The Committee believes that by  providing those officers who have
substantial responsibility for the management and growth of the Company and the
Bank an opportunity to increase their ownership  of the Company's Common Stock,
the  interests  of shareholders and executives will  be  closely  aligned.  The
Committee also believes that stock options whether under this plan or otherwise
are an important  component  in attracting and keeping quality personnel and in
contributing to the long term  objectives  of  the Company.  Therefore, persons
holding the positions of Vice President or more  senior  offices in the Company
and the Bank are eligible to receive stock options from time  to  time,  giving
them  the right to purchase shares of the Company's Common Stock at a specified
price in the future. Options are granted at an exercise price not less than the
closing  price of the Company's Common Stock in the AMEX reporting consolidated
trading on  the  date of grant.  In addition, in the case of Mr. Klein (and any
other participants who may own more than 10% of the outstanding voting stock of
the Company in the  future),  the  option  price of the shares is not less than
110% of such closing price on the date of grant.

     The  Committee  has  discretion in determining  whether  options  will  be
awarded in any given year, which eligible officers will receive options and the
number of options to be received  by such officer. Decisions concerning options
for a particular year are made in the  FOLLOWING  year.  In 1997, the Committee
decided that an award of options would be granted based upon the performance of
the Company during 1996.

     OBRA Deductibility Limitation.  The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation  Act  of
1993  prohibits  the  deduction  by public companies of compensation of certain
executive officers in excess of $1  million,  unless  certain criteria are met.
The Company has determined not to take any action at this  time with respect to
its compensation plans to seek to meet these criteria.

                                      16
<PAGE>

PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE

Raymond L. Sales, Chairman                           Leslie D. Aberson
William C. Ballard, Jr.                              James E. Cain
Martha Layne Collins                                 Bruce J. Roth
Henry C. Wagner



                        COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
                 INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

     The  Planning  and  Management  Committee  of  the  Board  of Directors is
responsible  for  executive compensation decisions as described above.   During
1997, the committee  consisted  of Raymond L. Sales, Leslie D. Aberson, William
C. Ballard, Jr., James E. Cain, Martha  Layne  Collins, Bruce J. Roth and Henry
C. Wagner.  Mr. Sales was, until July 31, 1997,  a  partner  in the law firm of
Segal,  Isenberg, Sales, Stewart, Cutler & Tillman, which the Company  retained
to perform  various legal services during 1997. Mr. Sales remains of counsel to
that firm.

                          OTHER TRANSACTIONS

     In the ordinary course of its business, the Company, through the Bank, has
in the past and  expects  to have in the future, banking transactions including
lending,  with  its  directors,  officers,  principal  shareholders  and  their
associates. Loans made  to  such  persons  are  made  in the ordinary course of
business,  on  substantially  the  same  terms,  including interest  rates  and
collateral,  as those prevailing at the time for comparable  transactions  with
other persons,  involving no more than normal risk of collection and presenting
no unfavorable features.

        SECTION 16(A) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

     Section 16(a)  of  the  Securities  Exchange  Act  of  1934  requires  the
Company's  directors  and executive officers, and persons who own more than ten
percent of the Company's stock, to file with the Securities Exchange Commission
initial reports of stock  ownership  and reports of changes in stock ownership.
Reporting persons are required by SEC  regulation  to  furnish the Company with
copies of all Section 16(a) reports they file.  Based solely  on  its review of
the  copies  of  such  reports received during the last fiscal year or  written
representations, the Company  believes  that  all  reports  required by Section
16(a) during the most recent fiscal year or prior fiscal years  were filed on a
timely basis.

                                      17

<PAGE>
         COMPARISON OF FIVE-YEAR CUMULATIVE SHAREHOLDER RETURN

     The  following  graph  shows  the  cumulative  return experienced  by  the
Company's  shareholders  during the last five years compared  to  the  S&P  500
Composite Stock Index and  the  NASDAQ  CRSP Bank Index.  The graph assumes the
investment of $100 on December 31, 1992 in  the Company's Common Stock and each
index and the reinvestment of all dividends paid during the five-year period.


                              MID-AMERICA BANCORP

                           TOTAL RETURN PERFORMANCE


























<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             PERIOD ENDING
<S>                      <C>            <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>

INDEX                       12/31/92      12/31/93      12/31/94      12/31/95      12/31/96      12/31/97

Mid-America Bancorp          100.00        117.51        120.02        135.83        153.77        289.67
S&P 500                      100.00        110.08        111.53        153.44        188.52        251.44
NASDAQ Bank Index            100.00        114.04        113.63        169.22        223.41        377.44
</TABLE>

                                      18

<PAGE>

         PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO THE ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION

OVERVIEW OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENTS

     The following summary discusses three proposed  additions  to the Articles
of Incorporation of the Company (the "Amendments") that are being  presented to
shareholders  as  three  separate  proposals.  Each of the Amendments has  been
approved unanimously by the Board of Directors. This summary is not intended to
be comprehensive and is qualified by reference to  the  text of the Amendments,
which are attached as Appendix A to this Proxy Statement.  The Amendments would
add the following provisions to the Articles of Incorporation of the Company:

     (i)   Proposed  Article  IX  would require certain transactions  involving
fundamental changes to the corporate  structure  of the Company or the transfer
of substantial amounts of its assets be approved by  the vote of holders of 75%
of  the  Company's outstanding shares of the Company.  The  supermajority  vote
would not  apply  to  transactions  approved by a majority of all the directors
then in office.

     (ii)  Proposed Article X provides  that  the  Company  would  elect  to be
governed  by  the  board  approval  and  supermajority voting provisions of the
Kentucky Business Combination Act (the "Act").   The  Act  imposes  a five-year
standstill  period  and  minimum  share  vote  approval requirements on certain
business combinations involving a Kentucky corporation  that  is  subject to or
elects to be governed by the provisions of the Act, unless specific  conditions
are satisfied.

     (iii) Proposed   Article   XI   would  require  a  supermajority  vote  of
shareholders  to amend or repeal the foregoing  provisions  and  certain  other
provisions of the articles of incorporation.

REASONS FOR THE AMENDMENTS

     The purpose  of the proposed Amendments is to provide for the stability of
the operations and  personnel of the Company, by increasing the leverage of the
Board  of Directors in  takeover  situations  generally.   The  Amendments  are
intended  to encourage third parties to initiate any attempt to acquire control
of the Company by negotiating with the management and Board of Directors of the
Company.  The Amendments will help ensure that the Board of Directors will have
sufficient   time   to   evaluate  any  acquisition  proposal  and  appropriate
alternatives on an informed basis and greater ability to negotiate a fair price
for all of the shareholders if a sale of the Company is determined by the Board
of Directors to be in the best interest of the Corporation.

     At the same time, the Amendments would discourage certain tactics that the
Board of Directors believes  can  be  highly  disruptive  to  a company and can
result  in  dissimilar and unfair treatment of its shareholders.  Such  tactics
include the accumulation of a substantial common stock position as a prelude to
an attempted  takeover  or  significant corporate restructuring, and the use of
"two-tiered pricing," in which  an  acquirer could offer to pay a premium price
in cash for the

                                      19
<PAGE>

number  of  shares  sufficient to  gain  control  of  the  target  corporation.
After  obtaining  control,  the acquirer could then pay a different price or a
less  desirable  form  of  consideration  for  the  remaining  shares  in  a
"squeeze-out" merger or similar  transaction  in  which  the remaining minority
position would be eliminated.  The proposed Amendments will  be  a  significant
deterrent to two-tiered pricing.

     The  Amendments,  if  they  are  adopted,  could  also have the effect  of
discouraging a third party from making a tender offer or  otherwise  attempting
to  obtain  control  of  the  Company  without  negotiating  with  the Board of
Directors,  even  though such a takeover attempt might be desirable to  certain
shareholders.  In addition,  since  the Amendments are designated to discourage
accumulations of large blocks of the  stock  of the Company by purchasers whose
objective  is  to have such stock repurchased by  the  Company  at  a  premium,
adoption of the  Amendments  could tend to reduce the temporary fluctuations in
the price of the stock of the  Company  that could result from accumulations of
large blocks of the stock of the Company.   Accordingly,  shareholders could be
deprived of certain opportunities to sell their stock at a  temporarily  higher
price.   The  Amendments  will  not  prevent a takeover that is approved by the
directors of the Company unaffiliated  with  the shareholder seeking to acquire
control of the Company.

     The  Board of Directors feels that now is  an  appropriate  time  for  the
adoption of these amendments. All of the larger banks in the area served by the
Company have  been acquired by regional bank holding companies headquartered in
other states. As  the area's largest locally managed bank, the Company believes
that it has an unusual  opportunity  for  growth if it remains independent. The
Board has adopted as part of the mission statement  of the Company, the goal to
maintain that independence. The proposed Amendments are  not  the result of any
specific  effort to accumulate shares of the Company or to acquire  control  of
the Company.

     Each of  the  proposed  Amendments will be approved if the number of votes
cast for the Amendment exceeds  the  number of votes cast against the Amendment
at the Annual Meeting.  Abstentions will  be  counted  as shares represented at
the Annual Meeting but not as votes either for or against an Amendment.  Broker
non-votes will not be counted as shares represented at the Annual Meeting or as
votes either for or against an Amendment.

     The Board of Directors believes that adoption of the  Amendments is in the
best  interests  of  all  of  the  shareholders  and unanimously adopted  these
recommendations  that  shareholders  vote  "FOR" each  of  the  three  proposed
Amendments.

PROPOSED ARTICLE IX

     Proposed Article IX would require the affirmative vote of the holders of a
least  75% of the outstanding shares of the voting  stock  of  the  Company  to
approve  the  following  transactions: (i) the sale of all or substantially all
the assets of the Company  or  any  subsidiary in which the Company owns 50% or
more of the voting stock; (ii) the sale  of shares of a subsidiary owned by

                                      20
<PAGE>

the Company; (iii) the distribution of any shares or assets of any subsidiary;
(iv) any merger or share exchange to which the  Company  or a subsidiary is a
party; (v) any split-off or split-up of the Company; or (vi)  the  dissolution
of the Company.

     The  supermajority requirements would not apply if either (a) the proposal
was approved  by  a  majority of the directors then in office (and not merely a
majority of a quorum), or (b) higher voting requirements apply.  If the Company
were to adopt proposed  Article  X  and  elect  thereby  to  be governed by the
Kentucky Business Combination Act, higher voting requirements  would  apply  to
transactions  between  the Company and any "interested shareholder," within the
meaning of that Act.

     The text of proposed Article IX is set forth in full in Appendix A.

     The primary purpose  of  Article IX is to encourage any potential acquirer
to  negotiate  with the Board to  obtain  its  concurrence  with  the  proposed
transaction and  thus  secure  the  decreased  voting  threshold.  The Board of
Directors could use this opportunity for negotiation to  attempt  to obtain the
most favorable terms for the Company and its shareholders or pursue alternative
measures.   Proposed  Article  IX  could  have  the  effect  of  rendering more
difficult  or  discouraging one of the transactions it covers, and accordingly,
would have an adverse impact on shareholders who favor such transactions.

     As a group,  the  Company's directors and officers as a group beneficially
own 29.07% of the Common  Stock  currently  outstanding.  Bertram W. Klein, the
Company's Chairman, beneficially owns 20.69%  of  the  Common  Stock  currently
outstanding.  Although  these  percentages  could  increase  or decrease in the
future, the shares currently owned by the Company's directors  and officers, if
voted together, would represent more than the 25% of the Common  Stock required
to  defeat  a  proposed business combination that was favored by holders  of  a
majority of the outstanding shares of Common Stock.

PROPOSED ARTICLE X

  
    
   Proposed Article  X  provides that the shareholder vote and board approval
requirements of the Kentucky  Business  Combination Act (KRS 271B.12-200 to 12-
230) would apply to specific transactions  defined  as  "business combinations"
between the Company and a person who, after the effective date of this proposed
Article X, acquires shares representing 10% of the Company's  voting power, and
thus  becomes  an  "Interested Shareholder" of the Company, at any  time  after
Article X becomes effective.    The  Act  applies to Kentucky corporations that
have at least 500 shareholders, have their  principal  offices in Kentucky, and
meet other criteria relating to the amount of shareholders,  stock or employees
located  in  Kentucky.  Unlike similar business combination statutes  of  other
states, the Kentucky  Act  does not apply to bank holding companies and certain
other financial institutions unless the institution's articles of incorporation
contain a provision providing that the institution will be governed by the Act.
Thus, Article X would provide  the  Company with

                                      21
<PAGE>

the same statutory protections against the self-dealing transactions  described
below that many other public companies of similar size currently have.
    
   

     The text of the proposed Article X is set forth in full in Appendix A. The
Act is set forth in full in Appendix B.

     KRS 271B.12-210 prohibits a "business combination" between  a  corporation
and  a  person who has accumulated a significant position in the stock  of  the
Corporation  for  five  years  from  the date such person became an "interested
shareholder"  within  the  meaning of the  Act  unless,  before  the  date  the
interested shareholder became  such,  the business combination is approved by a
majority  of  the  corporation's  "independent  directors."   The  Act  defines
"independent directors" as the directors  who  are not officers or employees of
the corporation nor are affiliated or associated with an interested shareholder
or any of its affiliates.  In addition to the five-year  standstill, a business
combination not approved by a majority of the independent directors must either
(a) be approved by 80% of the outstanding voting shares of  the corporation and
by  two-thirds  of  the  voting  shares  held  by shareholders other  than  the
interested shareholder who (or whose affiliate)  is  a  party  to  the business
combination,  voting  together  as  a  single voting group; or (b) meet certain
minimum price and procedural requirements designed to ensure equal treatment of
all shareholders.

     Transactions defined as "business combinations"  include  mergers, certain
dispositions of assets, certain issuances and transfers of securities,  certain
recapitalizations  and reorganizations, as well as other specified transactions
involving  a corporation  and  an  interested  shareholder.   In  addition,  an
interested shareholder's  receipt of the benefit of loans, pledges, guarantees,
tax benefits or other financial  assistance  from  the  corporation  other than
proportionally as a shareholder would be a business combination for purposes of
the Act.

     The Act defines an "interested shareholder" as any person, other  than the
corporation  or  any of its subsidiaries, who is the beneficial owner, directly
or indirectly, of  10%  or  more  of  the  voting  shares  of  the corporation,
including  for  this  purpose  any shares beneficially owned by any  entity  or
person affiliated or associated  with  the  interested  shareholder.  Article X
excludes   from  the  definition  of  interested  shareholder  a   person   who
beneficially  owns  10% or more of the voting power of outstanding voting stock
of the Company at the  time Article X takes effect unless and until such person
acquires additional shares  of  voting  stock  of  the  Company and becomes the
beneficial owner of 24% or more of the voting power of outstanding voting stock
of the Company. However, shares acquired pursuant to the employee benefit plans
of the Company, stock dividends, stock splits or similar  distributions  of  or
changes to the outstanding voting stock of the Company would not be counted for
this purpose.

     Currently,  the Company knows of one shareholder who beneficially owns 10%
or more of its voting  shares.   That shareholder is Mr. Klein, the Chairman of
the Company, who currently owns 20.69%  of  the  Common Stock.  For purposes of
Article X, Mr. Klein would become an interested

                                      22
<PAGE>

shareholder only if he acquired additional  shares  (other than as specifically
excepted  by  Article X)  to  increase  his  beneficial ownership to 24% of the
voting shares of the Company.

     The directors and officers of  the  Company  have  the power to vote up to
29.07%  of  the  currently  outstanding  shares  as  a  group.   Although  this
percentage could increase or decrease in the future, the shares currently owned
by  the  directors and officers of the Company collectively, and by  Mr.  Klein
individually,  would  represent more than the 20% required to defeat a proposed
business  combination that  was  favored  by  holders  of  a  majority  of  the
outstanding  shares of Common Stock, unless the terms of the proposal satisfied
minimum price  and  procedural  requirements  that  would  obviate the need for
supermajority approval of the transaction.

PROPOSED ARTICLE XI

     Proposed Article XI would require a supermajority vote to alter, amend, or
repeal specific provisions of the Articles of Incorporation,  or  to  adopt any
provision inconsistent with them, unless the proposed amendment is approved  by
a majority of directors who are not affiliated with the Interested Shareholder.
The   Articles   that  could  be  altered,  amended,  or  repealed  only  by  a
supermajority vote  are:  Article V [classified board of directors]; Article VI
[indemnification]; Article  VII  [board's authority to consider certain factors
in  evaluating  takeover  proposals];  Article  VIII  [limitation  of  director
liability]; Article IX [supermajority voting requirements]; Article X [business
combinations]; and Article  XI  [supermajority  vote to amend or repeal certain
Articles].

     The vote required to amend or repeal the listed  Articles  (the  "Required
Proportion") would be a percentage of the voting stock of all classes of shares
entitled to vote in election of directors.  The Required Proportion is  defined
as  the  SUM  of  (i) the number of shares owned by an "interested shareholder"
PLUS (ii) 70% of the  remaining  shares  DIVIDED  BY the total number of voting
shares.  For example, if the Company had one interested  shareholder owning 15%
of the voting shares, the Required Proportion would be .15  + (.85 x .7) = .745
or 74.5%.

     Article XI defines "interested shareholder" as any person who acquires 15%
or more of the voting shares after the Article takes effect.   Any  person  who
beneficially  owns 15% or more of the voting shares at the time Article X takes
effect would become  an  interested shareholder for purposes of Article XI only
if, and at such time as, that person acquires additional shares of voting stock
of the Company and becomes  the  beneficial  owner of 24% or more of the voting
power  of  outstanding voting stock of the Company.  However,  shares  acquired
pursuant to the Company's employee benefit plans, stock dividends, stock splits
or similar distributions  of  or  changes  to  the Company's outstanding voting
stock would not be counted for this purpose.  Thus,  Mr.  Klein would become an
interested  shareholder  for  purposes  of  Article  XI  only  if  he  acquired
additional  shares  (other  than  as  specifically  excepted by Article XI)  to
increase his beneficial ownership to 24% of the Company's voting shares.

     The text of proposed Article XI is set forth in full in Appendix A.

                                      23
<PAGE>

     The requirement of an increased shareholder vote  is designed to prevent a
shareholder  controlling  a majority of the voting stock of  the  Company  from
avoiding the requirements of  the  Articles  subject  to  Article  XI by simply
repealing them.  A proposal to alter, amend or repeal any of these Articles may
present a conflict of interest for an interested shareholder.  Article XI would
allow  those  of  the directors or shareholders of the Company without  such  a
conflict of interest  to  determine  whether  to change the provisions of these
Articles.  Article XI would work in conjunction  with the Articles IX and X and
certain other Articles by making their provisions more difficult to change.

     The Company's directors and officers to have  the  power  to  vote  up  to
29.07%  of  the  currently  outstanding  shares  as  a  group.   Although  this
percentage could increase or decrease in the future, the shares currently owned
by  the directors of the Company and officers of the Company, if voted together
at a  time  when the Company had an interested shareholder, would be sufficient
to defeat a proposal  to  amend or repeal Articles subject to the supermajority
voting requirements of Article XI.

CURRENT ARTICLES PROVISIONS AFFECTING TAKEOVERS

     The Articles of Incorporation of the Company currently include provisions,
and  the Company has taken other  measures,  that  could  have  the  effect  of
discouraging  a  third party from making a tender offer or otherwise attempting
to obtain control of the Company other than through negotiations with the Board
of Directors.

     PREFERRED STOCK.

     Article IV authorizes  the  Company  to  issue 750,000 shares of preferred
stock  ("Preferred  Stock")  in  one  or  more series  with  such  preferences,
limitations, and relative rights as may be determined by the Board of Directors
of the Company without further action by shareholders.   No shares of Preferred
Stock are currently issued or outstanding.  The Board of Directors has reserved
one series of 120,000 shares of the Preferred Stock for issuance  in connection
with  the  Company's  Shareholder  Rights  Agreement.  See "Shareholder  Rights
Agreement" below.

     The Board of Directors believes that the  ability  to issue a second class
of stock in one or more series with a range of potential  economic  and  voting
rights provides the Company with valuable flexibility in connection with a wide
range  of  possible  transactions, including acquisitions, combinations, equity
financings,  stock  distributions,  stock  splits,  stock  dividends,  employee
benefit plans and other  corporate  purposes.  The power to issue new Preferred
Stock could allow the Board of Directors  to  make it more difficult to replace
incumbent directors or accomplish certain business  combinations opposed by the
incumbent Board of Directors by issuing shares with sufficient  voting power or
economic  rights to ensure that such a proposal could not obtain the  requisite
approval of the shareholders of the Company.

                                      24
<PAGE>

     CLASSIFIED BOARD.

     Article  V  provides that the number of directors may not be less than ten
nor more than twenty-one and authorizes the Board of Directors to establish the
number of directors  within  that  range.   Article  V  also  provides that the
directors are divided into three classes, each class to be as nearly  equal  in
number  as  possible,  and  one  class  of directors to be elected annually.  A
classified board thus reduces the number  of  directors  otherwise  elected  by
shareholders  each  year, and increases the number of shares that must be voted
together to elect any  particular  director.    A classified board may have the
effect of discouraging a takeover attempt because  it  would  take  a  majority
shareholder  at  least  two  years  to  elect its nominees to a majority of the
positions on the Board of Directors.

     EVALUATION OF TAKEOVER PROPOSALS.

     Article VII authorizes the Board of  Directors  to base its response to an
acquisition proposal upon its evaluation of what is in  the  best  interests of
the Company and its shareholders.  For this purpose, the Board of Directors may
consider not only the consideration offered in the takeover bid in relation  to
the  then current market price but also the Board of Directors' estimate of the
current  or  future  value of the Company in a freely negotiated transaction as
well as the Board of Directors'  estimate  of  the Company's future value as an
independent entity.

     In addition, the Board of Directors may also  consider  such other factors
as  it  determines  to  be  relevant, including the social, legal and  economic
effects on employees, customers,  suppliers,  and  other  constituents  of  the
Company  and  on  the  communities in which the Company operates.  Finally, the
Board of Directors may consider  the  background and personnel of the acquiring
party.

     SHAREHOLDER RIGHTS AGREEMENT.

     On  February  23,  1998,  the  Board  of  Directors  declared  a  dividend
distribution  of one right (a "Right") for each  outstanding  share  of  Common
Stock to shareholders of record at the close of business on March 13, 1998 (the
"Record Date").  Each Right entitles the registered holder to purchase from the
Company a unit  consisting  of  one-hundredth  of  a  share (a "Unit") of 1998A
Junior  Participating  Preferred  Stock (the "Participating  Preferred")  at  a
purchase  price  of  $75.00  per  Unit  (the   "Purchase  Price"),  subject  to
adjustment.  The description and terms of the Rights  are set forth in a Rights
Agreement  dated as of February 23, 1998 (the "Rights Agreement")  between  the
Company and Bank of Louisville, as Rights Agent.

     Initially,  the  Rights  attach  to  all  the  Common  Stock  certificates
representing  shares then outstanding, and no separate Rights Certificates  are
distributed.  The Rights will separate from the Common Stock and a Distribution
Date will occur  upon  the  earlier  of (i) 10 business days following a public
announcement that a person or group of  affiliated  or  associated  persons (an
"Acquiring  Person") has acquired, or obtained the right to acquire, beneficial
ownership of  15%  or  more  of the

                                      25
<PAGE>

outstanding  shares  of  the  Common  Stock  (the "Stock  Acquisition Date") or
(ii) 10  business days following the commencement of a tender offer or exchange
offer that would result  in  a  person or group beneficially owning 15% or more
of such outstanding  shares  of the  Common  Stock.  In addition  to the Rights
dividend  on  shares  outstanding  on  the  Record  Date,  the Rights Agreement
provides  for  the  automatic issuance of a Right with respect  to  each  share
of the Common Stock issued after the Record Date  but before the earlier of the
Distribution  Date  or  the  date on which the Rights expire.

     The  definition  of  "Acquiring  Person"  excludes  any  shareholder   who
beneficially  owns 15% or more of the shares of Common Stock outstanding on the
date the Rights Agreement was adopted (an "Excluded Shareholder").  An Excluded
Shareholder may  become  an Acquiring Person only at such times as the Excluded
Shareholder becomes the beneficial  owner  of  24% or more of the shares of the
Common  Stock  outstanding  as a result of the Excluded  Shareholder  acquiring
additional shares of Common Stock  (other  than acquisitions as a result of the
death of a parent or spouse or pursuant to an  employee  benefit  plan, a stock
split, or a stock dividend).  The Excluded Shareholders include Mr.  Klein  and
certain members of his immediate family.

     The Rights are not exercisable until the Distribution Date and will expire
at  the  close  of  business  on March 13, 2008, unless earlier redeemed by the
Company as described below. Until  a  Right becomes exercisable and is actually
exercised (as described in succeeding paragraphs), the holder thereof, as such,
will have no voting, dividend or other rights as a shareholder of Company.

     Following any Stock Acquisition Date,  (i)  each  holder  of a Right other
than an Acquiring Person (or certain related parties) will have  the  right  to
receive,  upon  exercise,  Common  Stock  (or,  in certain circumstances, cash,
property or other securities of the Company) having  a value equal to two times
the  exercise  price  of  the Right, and (ii) all rights that  are,  or  (under
certain circumstances specified  in  the  Rights  Agreement) were, beneficially
owned by any Acquiring Person will be null and void.

     For example, at an exercise price of $75 per Right,  each  Right not owned
by  an  Acquiring  Person  (or  by certain related parties) following  a  Stock
Acquisition Date would entitle its  holder  to  purchase  $150  worth of Common
Stock  based on the current market price (as defined in the Agreement)  of  the
Common Stock  for  $75.  Assuming that the current market price of Common Stock
is $30 per share, the  holder of each valid Right would be entitled to purchase
5 shares of Common Stock for $75.

     If, at any time following  the  Stock Acquisition Date, (i) the Company is
acquired in a merger or other business  combination  transaction  in  which the
Company is not the surviving corporation (other than a merger which follows  an
offer  described in the second preceding paragraph), or (ii) 50% or more of the
Company's  assets  or  earning  power  is sold or transferred, each holder of a
Right (except Rights that previously have been voided as set forth above) shall
thereafter  have  the

                                      26
<PAGE>

right to receive, upon exercise, common stock  of  the acquiring company having
a value equal to two times the exercise price of the Right.

     The Company may redeem all  (but  no  fewer  than  all) of the Rights at a
price of $.01 per Right (payable in cash, Common Stock or  other  consideration
deemed appropriate by the Board of Directors).  The decision to redeem requires
the concurrence of a majority of the Continuing Directors. The term "Continuing
Directors" means any member of the Board of Directors who was also  a member of
the  Board before the date an Acquiring Person became such, and any person  who
is subsequently  elected to the Board if such person is recommended or approved
by a majority of the  Continuing  Directors,  but does not include an Acquiring
Person  or  an  affiliate  or  associate  of  an  Acquiring   Person   or   any
representative of the foregoing entities.

     Rights agreements generally provide a significant deterrent to attempts to
acquire  control  of  a  corporation  without  the  approval  of  the  board of
directors.   The  Rights  would cause substantial dilution to a person or group
that attempts to acquire control  without  Board  approval  unless the offer is
conditioned upon the redemption of the Rights.  The Rights, however, should not
affect  any  prospective  offeror willing to make an offer for all  outstanding
shares of the Common Stock  at  a fair price and otherwise in the best interest
of the Company and its shareholders  as determined by the Board of Directors or
affect  any  prospective  offeror  willing  to  negotiate  with  the  Board  of
Directors.  The Rights should not interfere  with  any merger or other business
combination approved by the Board of Directors since  the  Board  of  Directors
may,  at  its  option, redeem all but not less than all of the then outstanding
Rights or amend  the  Rights  Agreement  so  as  not  to  apply to a negotiated
transaction.

     The  Rights  Agreement, which sets forth the terms and conditions  of  the
Rights, is incorporated  herein  by  reference.   See "Incorporation of Certain
Documents by Reference."  The foregoing description  of  the  Rights  does  not
purport  to  be  complete  and is qualified in its entirety by reference to the
Rights Agreement.


    
                                  * * * * *                               
    
   

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS  THAT  SHAREHOLDERS  VOTE  "FOR"  EACH OF THE
THREE AMENDMENTS.


INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

     The selection of  independent auditors to audit the Company's consolidated
financial  statements  for  the year ended December 31, 1998, has not yet  been
made. The timing of this selection  allows  the Audit Committee of the Board of
Directors additional time to review the performance of the independent auditors
during the past year, the complete results of the audit process and to make its
recommendation to the Board of Directors. The   Board  of  Directors intends

                                      27
<PAGE>

to select an independent auditor following its receipt of the recommendation of
the Audit Committee  by  the  end  of  the  second  quarter of 1998.  KPMG Peat
Marwick  LLP  has  acted  as  the  Company's independent auditors  since  1990.
Representatives of KPMG Peat Marwick  LLP will be present at the Annual Meeting
and will be given the opportunity to make  a  statement  if they so desire, and
will answer appropriate questions directed to them relating  to  their audit of
the Company's consolidated financial statements.

                      INCORPORATION BY REFERENCE

     The  Current  Report of the Company on Form 8-K dated February  23,  1998,
which relates to the  adoption of the Rights Agreement dated as of February 23,
1998,  between  the Company  and  Bank  of  Louisville,  as  Rights  Agent,  is
incorporated herein by reference.

                             OTHER MATTERS

     The only matters to be considered at the Annual Meeting or any adjournment
thereof, so far as  known to the Board of Directors, are those set forth in the
Notice of Meeting and  routine  matters incident to the conduct of the meeting.
However, if any other matters should  properly  come  before the meeting or any
adjournment  thereof,  it  is  the  intention  of  the  persons  named  in  the
accompanying  form  of  proxy,  or  their substitutes, to vote  such  proxy  in
accordance with their judgments in such matters.

             SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR 1998 ANNUAL MEETING

     Shareholders who desire to present proposals at the 1998 annual meeting of
shareholders must forward them in writing  to  the  President of the Company so
that  they  are  received  no  later than November 17, 1998,  in  order  to  be
considered for inclusion in the Company's proxy statement for such meeting.

                                     By order of the Board of Directors

                                                           Orson Oliver
                                                              President
Louisville, Kentucky

    
   March 19, 1998
    
   

                                      28

<PAGE>
                              APPENDIX A

TEXT OF PROPOSED NEW ARTICLES IX, X AND XI TO THE ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
                         OF MIDAMERICA BANCORP


                              ARTICLE IX

Certain Voting Requirements

(a)  In addition to any other requirements required by law or these Articles of
     Incorporation, except as specified  in (b) below, a vote of the holders of
     at least seventy-five percent (75%) of the number of outstanding shares of
     each class of the capital stock of the  Corporation  shall  be required to
     approve:


    
     (i)   The  sale  of  all  or  substantially  all  of  the  assets  of  the
           Corporation;

     (ii)  The  sale  of  all  or  substantially  all  of  the  assets  of  any
           Subsidiary;

     (iii) The sale of all or part of the shares of any Subsidiary owned by the
           Corporation;

     (iv)  The  distribution,  by  way  of  spinoff,  dividend or other similar
           transaction of any shares of any Subsidiary or any assets thereof;

     (v)   Any  merger  or  share  exchange  to  which the Corporation  or  any
           Subsidiary is a party;

     (vi)  Any split-off or split-up of the Corporation; or

     (vii) A plan of dissolution of the Corporation.
    
   

(b)  The voting requirements of this Article shall  not  apply to a transaction
     specified in (a)(i) through (a)(vii) where:

     (i)   Any  other  provision  of law or these Articles specifies  a  higher
           voting  requirement,  including,   without   limitation,  Article  X
           ["Business Combinations"] and KRS 271B.12-210; or

     (ii)  The proposed action has received the approval  of  a majority of the
           directors of the Corporation then holding office.

                                      A-1
<PAGE>

(c)  For purposes of this Article, "Subsidiary" shall mean any corporation more
     than 50% of whose outstanding stock having voting power in the election of
     directors  is owned, directly or indirectly, by the Corporation  or  by  a
     Subsidiary or by the Corporation and one or more Subsidiaries.


                               ARTICLE X

Business Combinations

     The requirements  of  a  shareholder  vote  and  board approval in Section
271B.12-210  of  the  Kentucky  Revised  Statutes  (the "Business  Combinations
Statute") shall apply only to any Business Combination  of the Corporation with
a person who becomes an Interested Shareholder of the Corporation  at  any time
after  the  effective  time of this Article X pursuant to KRS 271B.1-230.   For
purposes of this Article X, "Business Combination" and "Interested Shareholder"
shall  have the meanings  set  forth  in  the  Business  Combinations  Statute;
provided, however that a person who beneficially owns 10% or more of the voting
power of  outstanding  voting stock of the Corporation at the effective time of
this Article X shall not become an Interested Shareholder unless and until such
time as such person shall  become  the  beneficial  owner of 24% or more of the
voting power of outstanding voting stock of the Corporation  solely as a result
of such person's acquiring beneficial ownership of additional  shares of voting
stock of the Corporation (other than shares acquired as a result  of  the death
of  a  parent  or  spouse or acquired pursuant to a profit-sharing, stock-based
incentive compensation  or  other  employee  benefit  plan  maintained  by  the
Corporation,  to  a dividend or distribution paid or made by the Corporation on
the outstanding voting  stock  in  shares  of the same class of stock,  or to a
split or subdivision of the outstanding voting stock).

                                      A-2

<PAGE>

                              ARTICLE XI


                Amendment or Repeal of Certain Articles

(a)  CERTAIN DEFINITIONS.  For the purposes of this Article:

     (i)   A  "Person"  shall  mean  any  individual,   firm,   trust,  estate,
           corporation or business organization.

     (ii)  "Interested  Shareholder"  shall  mean  any Person (other  than  the
           Corporation or any Subsidiary) who or which:

           (1)  becomes the beneficial owner, directly  or  indirectly, of more
                than 15% of the combined voting power of the  then  outstanding
                shares  of  Voting  Stock  after  the  date  this Article takes
                effect; or

           (2)  beneficially owns, directly or indirectly, more than 15% of the
                combined voting power of the then outstanding  shares of Voting
                Stock at the date this Article takes effect, but  only  if, and
                at such time as, the Person becomes the beneficial owner of 24%
                or more of the outstanding shares of Voting Stock solely  as  a
                result  of  such  Person's  acquiring  beneficial  ownership of
                additional  shares of Voting Stock (other than shares  acquired
                as a result of  the  death  of  a  parent or spouse or acquired
                pursuant    to   a   profit-sharing,   stock-based    incentive
                compensation  or  other employee benefit plan maintained by the
                Corporation, to a dividend  or distribution paid or made by the
                Corporation on the outstanding  Voting  Stock  in shares of the
                same  class  of  stock,  or  to a split or subdivision  of  the
                outstanding Voting Stock); or

           (3)  is an Affiliate of the Corporation, became the beneficial owner
                (directly  or indirectly) of more  than  15%  of  the  combined
                voting power  of  the  then  outstanding shares of Voting Stock
                after  the date this Article takes  effect,  and  at  any  time
                within the  two-year  period  immediately  prior to the date in
                question was the beneficial owner (directly  or  indirectly) of
                15%   or  more  of  the  combined  voting  power  of  the  then
                outstanding shares of Voting Stock; or

           (4)  is an assignee  of or has otherwise succeeded to the beneficial
                ownership of any  shares  of Voting Stock that were at any time
                within the two-year period  immediately  prior  to  the date in
                question  beneficially owned by any Interested Shareholder,  if
                such  assignment  or  succession  shall  have  occurred

                                      A-3
<PAGE>

                in the course of a transaction or series of transactions not
                involving a public offering within the meaning of the
                Securities Act of 1933.

     (iii) A Person shall be a "beneficial owner" of  any Voting Stock:

           (1)  which  such Person or  any  of  its  Affiliates  or  Associates
                beneficially owns, directly or indirectly; or

           (2)  which such  Person  or  any of its Affiliates or Associates has
                (A) the right to acquire  (whether  such  right  is exercisable
                immediately or only after the passage of time), pursuant to any
                agreement, arrangement or understanding or upon the exercise of
                conversion  rights,  exchange  rights, warrants or options,  or
                otherwise, or (B) the right to vote or direct the vote pursuant
                to any agreement, arrangement or understanding; or

           (3)  which are beneficially owned, directly  or  indirectly,  by any
                other Person with which such Person or any of its Affiliates or
                Associates has any agreement, arrangement or understanding  for
                the  purpose  of acquiring, holding, voting or disposing of any
                shares of Voting Stock.

     (iv)  For the purposes of  determining  whether  a person is an Interested
           Shareholder  pursuant  to (a) (ii) of this Article,  the  number  of
           shares of Voting Stock deemed to be outstanding shall include shares
           deemed owned through application  of  (a)(iii)  of  this Article but
           shall  not  include  any  other shares of Voting Stock that  may  be
           issuable pursuant to any agreement, arrangement or understanding, or
           upon  exercise  of  conversion   rights,  warrants  or  options,  or
           otherwise.

     (v)   "Affiliate"  and  "Associate" shall  have  the  respective  meanings
           ascribed to such terms  in  Rule  12b-2  of  the  General  Rules and
           Regulations under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as in  effect
           on January 1, 1998.

     (vi)  "Subsidiary"  shall  mean  any  corporation  more  than 50% of whose
           outstanding  stock having ordinary voting power in the  election  of
           directors is owned, directly or indirectly, by the Corporation or by
           a Subsidiary or  by  the  Corporation  and one or more Subsidiaries;
           PROVIDED,  HOWEVER,  that  for the purposes  of  the  definition  of
           Interested Shareholder set forth  in  (a)(ii)  of  this Article, the
           term "Subsidiary" shall mean only a corporation of which  a majority
           of  each  class of equity security is owned, directly or indirectly,
           by the Corporation.

                                      A-4
<PAGE>

     (vii) "Disinterested  Director"  shall mean (1) any member of the Board of
           Directors of the Corporation  who  is  unaffiliated  with, and not a
           nominee of, the Interested Shareholder and was a member of the Board
           prior  to  the  time  that  the  Interested  Shareholder  became  an
           Interested  Shareholder,  or  (2)  any  successor of a Disinterested
           Director  who  is  unaffiliated  with, and not  a  nominee  of,  the
           Interested  Shareholder  and  who  is   recommended   to  succeed  a
           Disinterested Director by a majority of Disinterested Directors then
           on the Board of Directors.

     (viii)"Voting  Stock" shall mean the voting power of the then  outstanding
           shares of all classes and series of the Corporation entitled to vote
           generally in the election of directors.

(b)  Notwithstanding  anything  in  these  Articles  of  Incorporation  to  the
     contrary  and  in  addition  to  any affirmative vote required by law, the
     affirmative vote of the Required Proportion  (as  defined below) of Voting
     Stock shall be required to alter, amend, or repeal  Articles V [Number and
     Authority  of  Directors],  VI  [Indemnification],  VII [Consideration  of
     Certain  Factors],  VIII [Limitation of Director Liability],  IX  [Certain
     Voting Requirements],  X  [Business  Combinations],  or  XI  [Amendment or
     Repeal of Certain Articles] of these Articles of Incorporation or to adopt
     any provision inconsistent therewith.

(c)  For  purposes  of  paragraph  (b) of this Article, the Required Proportion
     shall be calculated by DIVIDING (i) the sum of (1) the number of shares of
     Voting Stock beneficially owned by any Interested Shareholder, directly or
     indirectly plus (2) seventy percent  of all the remaining shares of Voting
     Stock not beneficially owned by any Interested  Shareholder,  directly  or
     indirectly BY (ii) the total number of shares of Voting Stock.

(d)  A  majority  of  the Disinterested Directors of the Corporation shall have
     the power and duty to determine, on the basis of information known to them
     after reasonable inquiry, all facts necessary to determine compliance with
     this Article, including,  without  limitation,  (i) whether a Person is an
     Interested  Shareholder,  (ii)  the  number  of  shares  of  Voting  Stock
     beneficially owned by any Person, (iii) whether a  Person  is an Affiliate
     or Associate of another Person and whether a director is unaffiliated with
     an Interested Shareholder, and (iv) whether the requirements  of paragraph
     (b)  of  this  Article have been met with respect to any shareholder  vote
     specified therein.   The  good  faith  determination  of a majority of the
     Disinterested  Directors on such matters shall be conclusive  and  binding
     for all purposes of this Article.

                                      A-5

<PAGE>
                              APPENDIX B

                  KENTUCKY BUSINESS COMBINATIONS ACT


271B.12-200 DEFINITIONS FOR KRS 271B.12-210 TO 271B.12-230

As used in KRS 271B.12-210 to 271B.12-230:

(1)  "Affiliate," including  the  term  "affiliated person," means a person who
     directly, or indirectly through one  (1) or more intermediaries, controls,
     or is controlled by, or is under common control with, a specified person.

(2)  "Associate," when used to indicate a relationship with any person, means:

     (a)   Any corporation or organization  (other  than  the  corporation or a
           subsidiary of the corporation) of which such person is  an  officer,
           director  or  partner  or is, directly or indirectly, the beneficial
           owner  of  ten  percent  (10%)  or  more  of  any  class  of  equity
           securities;

     (b)   Any trust or other estate  in  which  such  person has a substantial
           beneficial interest or as to which such person  serves as trustee or
           in a similar fiduciary capacity; and

     (c)   Any  relative  or  spouse  of such person, or any relative  of  such
           spouse, any one (1) of whom has the same home as such person or is a
           director or officer of the corporation or any of its affiliates.

(3)  "Beneficial owner," when used with  respect  to  any voting stock, means a
     person:

     (a)   Who,  individually  or  with  any of its affiliates  or  associates,
           beneficially owns voting stock, directly or indirectly; or

     (b)   Who, individually or with any of its affiliates or associates, has:

           1.   The  right  to acquire voting  stock,  whether  such  right  is
                exercisable immediately  or  only after the passage of time and
                whether or not such right is exercisable  only  after specified
                conditions are met, pursuant to any agreement, arrangement,  or
                understanding  or  upon  the  exercise  of  conversion  rights,
                exchange rights, warrants or options, or otherwise;

           2.   The  right  to  vote  voting  stock  pursuant to any agreement,
                arrangement, or understanding; or

                                      B-1
<PAGE>

           3.   Any agreement, arrangement, or understanding for the purpose of
                acquiring, holding, voting or disposing  of  voting  stock with
                any other person who beneficially owns, or whose affiliates  or
                associates  beneficially  own,  directly  or  indirectly,  such
                shares  of  voting  stock;  however,  for  the purposes of this
                section and KRS 271B.12-230 the beneficial owner  of any voting
                stock held by, or owned through participation in, any purchase,
                savings,  option, bonus, appreciation, profit sharing,  thrift,
                incentive,   pension,  stock  ownership  or  similar  plan  for
                employees  or  officers  of  the  corporation  or  any  of  its
                subsidiaries shall be deemed to be the shareholder of record of
                such voting stock  as  shown on the stock transfer books of the
                corporation.

(4)  "Business combination" means:

     (a)   Unless  the merger or consolidation  does  not  alter  the  contract
           rights of  the  stock  as  expressly  set  forth  in the articles of
           incorporation  or  change  or  convert  in  whole  or  in  part  the
           outstanding  shares  of  stock  of  the  corporation,  any merger or
           consolidation  of  the  corporation  or  any  subsidiary  with   any
           interested  shareholder  or  any  other  corporation, whether or not
           itself an interested shareholder, which is,  or  after the merger or
           consolidation would be, an affiliate or associate  of  an interested
           shareholder   who   was  an  interested  shareholder  prior  to  the
           transaction;

     (b)   Any sale, lease, transfer,  or  other disposition, other than in the
           ordinary course of business, in one  (1)  transaction or a series of
           transactions   in  any  twelve-month  period,  to   any   interested
           shareholder  or  any   affiliate  or  associate  of  any  interested
           shareholder, other than  the corporation or any subsidiaries, of any
           assets of the corporation  or any subsidiary having, measured at the
           time the transaction or transactions  are  approved  by the board of
           directors of the corporation, an aggregate book value  as of the end
           of  the  corporation's  most recently ended fiscal quarter  of  five
           percent (5%) or more of the  total  market  value of the outstanding
           stock of the corporation or of its net worth  as  of  the end of its
           most recently ended fiscal quarter;

     (c)   The  issuance or transfer by the corporation, or any subsidiary,  in
           one transaction  or  a  series  of  transactions in any twelve-month
           period,  of  any  equity  securities  of  the   corporation  or  any
           subsidiary which have an aggregate market value of five percent (5%)
           or more of the total market value of the outstanding  stock  of  the
           corporation,  determined  as  of  the  end of the corporation's most
           recently ended fiscal quarter prior to the  first  such  issuance or
           transfer,   to  any  interested  shareholder  or  any  affiliate  or
           associate of  any interested shareholder, other than the corporation
           or any of its subsidiaries,  except  pursuant  to  the  exercise  of
           warrants  or  rights  to purchase securities offered pro rata to all
           holders  of the corporation's  voting  stock  or  any

                                      B-2
<PAGE>

           other  method affording  substantially  proportionate  treatment to
           the holders of voting stock;

     (d)   The  adoption  of  any  plan  or  proposal  for the  liquidation  or
           dissolution  of the corporation in which anything  other  than  cash
           will be received  by  an  interested shareholder or any affiliate or
           associate of any interested shareholder; or

     (e)   Any  reclassification of securities,  including  any  reverse  stock
           split;  or  recapitalization  of  the  corporation; or any merger or
           consolidation of the corporation with any  of  its  subsidiaries; or
           any other transaction which has the effect, directly  or indirectly,
           in  one  transaction  or a series of transactions, of increasing  by
           five  percent  (5%)  or  more   the   proportionate  amount  of  the
           outstanding  shares  of  any  class  of  equity  securities  of  the
           corporation  or  any  subsidiary  which  is directly  or  indirectly
           beneficially owned by any interested shareholder or any affiliate or
           associate of any interested shareholder; or

     (f)   Any  receipt  by  an  interested  shareholder or  any  affiliate  or
           associate of such interested shareholder  of the benefit directly or
           indirectly,  except  proportionately  as  a  shareholder   of   such
           corporation,  of  any  loans, advances, guaranties, pledges or other
           financial assistance, or  any  tax  credits  or other tax advantages
           provided by or through such corporation.

(5)  "Common stock" means any stock other than preferred or preference stock.

(6)  "Continuing director" means any member of the board  of  directors  who is
     not  an affiliate or associate of an interested shareholder or any of  its
     affiliates, other than the corporation or any of its subsidiaries, and who
     was a  director  of  the  corporation  prior  to  the  time the interested
     shareholder  became an interested shareholder, and any successor  to  such
     continuing director  who is not an affiliate or associate of an interested
     shareholder or any of its affiliates, other than the corporation or any of
     its subsidiaries, and  was  recommended  or  elected  by a majority of the
     continuing  directors  at  a  meeting  at which a quorum consisting  of  a
     majority of the continuing directors is present.

(7)  "Control," including the terms "controlling,"  "controlled  by" and "under
     common control with," means the possession, directly or indirectly, of the
     power to direct or cause the direction of the management and policies of a
     person,  whether through the ownership of voting securities, by  contract,
     or otherwise, and the beneficial ownership of ten percent (10%) or more of
     the votes  entitled  to  be cast by a corporation's voting stock creates a
     presumption of control.

(8)  "Equity security" means:

                                      B-3
<PAGE>

     (a)   Any  stock  or  similar   security,   certificate  of  interest,  or
           participation   in  any  profit-sharing  agreement,   voting   trust
           certificate, or certificate of deposit for the foregoing;

     (b)   Any security convertible,  with  or  without  consideration, into an
           equity security, or any warrant or other security carrying any right
           to subscribe to or purchase an equity security; or

     (c)   Any  put,  call, straddle, or other option, right  or  privilege  of
           acquiring an  equity  security from or selling an equity security to
           another without being bound to do so.

(9)  "Independent member" of the board  of  directors means any director who is
     not an officer or full-time employee of the corporation or an affiliate or
     associate of an interested shareholder or any of its affiliates.

(10) "Interested shareholder" means any person,  other  than the corporation or
     any of its subsidiaries, who:

     (a)   Is  the  beneficial owner, directly or indirectly,  of  ten  percent
           (10%) or more of the voting power of the outstanding voting stock of
           the corporation;  or  is  an affiliate of the corporation and at any
           time within the five-year period  immediately  prior  to the date in
           question  was the beneficial owner, directly or indirectly,  of  ten
           percent (10%)  or  more  of the voting power of the then outstanding
           voting stock of the corporation.  The  term  interested  shareholder
           shall  not mean any entity or person holding or owning voting  stock
           for, or  through  participation  in,  any purchase, savings, option,
           bonus,  appreciation,  profit sharing, thrift,  incentive,  pension,
           stock ownership or similar  plan  for  employees  or officers of the
           corporation or any of its subsidiaries.

     (b)   For  the  purpose of determining whether a person is  an  interested
           shareholder,  the  number  of  shares  of  voting stock deemed to be
           outstanding shall include shares deemed owned  by the person through
           application of subsection (3) of this section, but shall not include
           any other shares of voting stock which may be issuable  pursuant  to
           any  agreement,  arrangement,  or understanding, or upon exercise of
           conversion rights, warrants or options, or otherwise.

(11) "Market value" means:

     (a)   In the case of stock, the highest  closing  sale  price  during  the
           thirty-day  period  immediately  preceding the date in question of a
           share  of  such  stock on the composite  tape  for  New  York  stock
           exchange listed stocks,  or,  if  such  stock  is  not quoted on the
           composite tape on the New York stock exchange, or if  such  stock is
           not  listed  on  such  exchange,  on  the  principal  United  States
           securities exchange

                                      B-4
<PAGE>

           registered under the Securities Exchange Act  of 1934  on which such
           stock  is  listed,  or,  if  such  stock  is  not listed on any such
           exchange, the highest closing bid quotation with  respect to a share
           of such stock during  the  thirty-day  period  preceding the date in
           question  on  the  National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.,
           Automated Quotations System or any system then in use, or if no such
           quotations  are  available,  the  fair  market  value on the date in
           question of a share of such stock as  determined by a majority of
           the continuing directors at a meeting of the  board  of directors at
           which  a quorum consisting of at least a majority of the  continuing
           directors is present; and

     (b)   In the case  of  property  other than cash or stock, the fair market
           value of such property on the  date  in  question as determined by a
           majority of the continuing directors at a  meeting  of  the board of
           directors at which a quorum consisting of at least a majority of the
           continuing directors is present.

(12) "Subsidiary" means any corporation of which voting stock having a majority
     of the votes entitled to be cast is owned, directly or indirectly,  by the
     corporation.

(13) "Voting stock" means shares of capital stock of a corporation entitled  to
     vote generally in the election of directors.


271B.12-210   MINIMUM   SHARE   VOTE  REQUIREMENTS  FOR  APPROVAL  OF  BUSINESS
COMBINATIONS; LIMITATIONS ON BUSINESS CORPORATION

(1)  In addition to any vote otherwise  required  by  law  or  the  articles of
     incorporation  of the corporation, a business combination shall either  be
     approved  by a majority  of  the  independent  members  of  the  board  of
     directors who are also continuing directors, provided that the independent
     members of  the  board  of  directors  shall not, for the purposes of this
     subsection, be required to either approve  or  disapprove  of any proposed
     business combination, or approved by the affirmative vote of at least:

     (a)   Eighty percent (80%) of the votes entitled to be cast by outstanding
           shares  of  voting  stock of the corporation, voting together  as  a
           single voting group; and

     (b)   Two-thirds of the votes  entitled  to  be  cast by holders of voting
           stock other than voting stock beneficially owned  by  the interested
           shareholder  who is, or whose affiliate is, a party to the  business
           combination or  by  an  affiliate  or  associate  of such interested
           shareholder, voting together as a single voting group.

                                      B-5
<PAGE>

(2)  Unless  a  business  combination  is  exempted from the operation  of  KRS
     271B.12-200  to  271B.12-230 in accordance  with  the  terms  hereof,  the
     failure to comply  with  the voting requirements of subsection (1) of this
     section shall render such business combination void.

(3)  Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in this chapter (except
     the provisions of KRS 271B.12-220(5)(a)),  no  corporation shall engage in
     any business combination with any entity or person  who  is at the time of
     such  business combination an interested shareholder of such  corporation,
     unless such person became an interested shareholder before March 28, 1986,
     for a period of five (5) years following the date on which such interested
     shareholder   became   an  interested  shareholder  unless  such  business
     combination is approved  by  a  majority of the independent members of the
     board of directors of such corporation  prior  to  such  date on which the
     interested shareholder became an interested shareholder. If  a  good faith
     proposal  is made in writing to the board of directors of such corporation
     regarding a business combination, the board of directors shall respond, in
     writing, within thirty (30) days or such shorter period, if any, as may be
     required by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, setting forth its reasons
     for its decision  regarding  such proposal. If the board of directors does
     not respond affirmatively in writing  within  thirty  (30)  days  or  such
     shorter  period, if any, as may be required by the Securities Exchange Act
     of 1934, the independent members of the board of directors shall be deemed
     to have disapproved the business combination.

(4)  In discharging  its  duties under this section, or otherwise, the board of
     directors, in considering  the  best  interests  of  the  corporation, may
     consider  in addition to the interests of the corporation's  shareholders,
     any of the following:

     (a)   The interests  of  the corporation's employees, suppliers, creditors
           and customers;

     (b)   The economy of the state and nation;

     (c)   Community and societal considerations; and

     (d)   The long-term as well as short-term interests of the corporation and
           its shareholders, including the possibility that these interests may
           be best served by the continued independence of the corporation.

     (5)   Notwithstanding  KRS  271B.6-020  and  any  other  provision of this
           chapter,  and  unless  otherwise  provided  in  the  articles  of
           incorporation  before  the creation or issuance  of  any  rights  or
           options  as  set  forth  herein, in considering the interests of the
           corporation's shareholders, the board of directors of a  corporation
           may, before, on  or  after July 15, 1988, create and issue rights or
           options  pursuant  to KRS 271B.6-240 which  may  contain  provisions
           which adjust the  option price or  number  of shares issuable  under
           such rights or  options in the event of an acquisition of  shares or
           a  reorganization,  merger,  consolidation, sale of assets or  other
           occurrence

                                      B-6
<PAGE>

           involving such corporation.  Such rights or options may also include
           conditions that prevent the holder or holders of at least a specified
           number or percentage of the outstanding shares  of  the corporation,
           including subsequent transferees of the holder, from exercising those
           rights or options.



271B.12-220 EXEMPTIONS FROM MINIMUM SHARE VOTE REQUIREMENTS

(1)  For purposes of subsection (2) of this section:

     (a)   "Announcement  date" means the first general public announcement  of
           the proposal or  intention  to  make  a  proposal  of  the  business
           combination or its first communication generally to shareholders  of
           the corporation, whichever is earlier;

     (b)   "Determination   date"   means  the  date  on  which  an  interested
           shareholder first became an interested shareholder; and

     (c)   "Valuation date" means:

           1.   For a business combination  voted  upon  by  shareholders,  the
                latter of the day prior to the date of the shareholders vote or
                the  date  twenty  (20)  days  prior to the consummation of the
                business combination; and

           2.   For a business combination not voted  upon by shareholders, the
                date of the consummation of the business combination.

(2)  The  vote  required  by  KRS  271B.12-210  does not apply  to  a  business
     combination if each of the following conditions is met:

     (a)   The aggregate amount of the cash and the  market  value  as  of  the
           valuation  date of consideration, other than cash to be received per
           share by holders of common stock in such business combination, is at
           least equal to the highest of the following:

           1.   The  highest   per   share   price   (including  any  brokerage
                commissions, transfer taxes and soliciting  dealers' fees) paid
                by the interested shareholder for any shares of common stock of
                the same class or series acquired by it:

                a.    Within the five (5) year period immediately  prior to the
                      announcement   date  of  the  proposal  of  the  business
                      combination;

                                      B-7
<PAGE>

                b.    In the transaction  in  which  it  became  an  interested
                      shareholder, whichever is higher; or

           2.   The market value per share of common stock of the same class or
                series  on the announcement date or on the determination  date,
                whichever is higher; or

           3.   The price  per  share  equal  to  the market value per share of
                common stock of the same class or series determined pursuant to
                subparagraph 2. of this paragraph,  multiplied  by the fraction
                of:

                a.    The  highest  per  share  price, including any  brokerage
                      commissions, transfer taxes and soliciting dealers' fees,
                      paid  by the interested shareholder  for  any  shares  of
                      common  stock  of the same class or series acquired by it
                      within the five  (5) year period immediately prior to the
                      announcement date, over

                b.    The market value per  share  of  common stock of the same
                      class or series on the first day in  such  five  (5) year
                      period  on which the interested shareholder acquired  any
                      shares of common stock;

     (b)   The aggregate amount  of  the  cash  and  the market value as of the
           valuation date of consideration other than  cash  to be received per
           share  by  holders  of shares of any class or series of  outstanding
           stock other than common  stock  is  at least equal to the highest of
           the  following,  whether  or  not  the  interested  shareholder  has
           previously acquired any shares of a particular  class  or  series of
           stock:

           1.   The   highest   per   share   price,  including  any  brokerage
                commissions, transfer taxes and  soliciting dealers' fees, paid
                by the interested shareholder for  any  shares of such class of
                stock acquired by it:

                a.    Within the five (5) year period immediately  prior to the
                      announcement   date  of  the  proposal  of  the  business
                      combination;

                b.    In the transaction  in  which  it  became  an  interested
                      shareholder, whichever is higher; or

           2.   The highest preferential amount per share to which the  holders
                of  shares of such class of stock are entitled in the event  of
                any  voluntary   or  involuntary  liquidation,  dissolution  or
                winding up of the corporation;

                                      B-8
<PAGE>

           3.   The market value per  share  of  such  class  of  stock  on the
                announcement  date  or on the determination date, whichever  is
                higher; or

           4.   The price per share equal to the market value per share of such
                class of stock determined  pursuant  to subparagraph 3. of this
                paragraph, multiplied by the fraction of:

                a.    The  highest  per  share price, including  any  brokerage
                      commissions, transfer taxes and soliciting dealers' fees,
                      paid by the interested  shareholder for any shares of any
                      class of voting stock acquired  by it within the five (5)
                      year period immediately prior to  the  announcement date,
                      over

                b.    The  market value per share of the same class  of  voting
                      stock  on  the  first day in such five (5) year period on
                      which the interested  shareholder  acquired any shares of
                      the same class of voting stock.

     (c)   In  making  any  price  calculation under this section,  appropriate
           adjustments shall be made to reflect any reclassification, including
           any reverse stock split;  recapitalization;  reorganization;  or any
           similar  transaction which has the effect of reducing the number  of
           outstanding shares of the stock. The consideration to be received by
           holders of any class or series of outstanding stock is to be in cash
           or in the  same  form  as  the interested shareholder has previously
           paid  for shares of the same  class  or  series  of  stock.  If  the
           interested  shareholder  has  paid  for shares of any class of stock
           with varying forms of consideration,  the  form of consideration for
           such class of stock shall be either cash or the form used to acquire
           the  largest  number  of  shares of such class or  series  of  stock
           previously acquired by it;

     (d)   1.   After  the  interested shareholder  has  become  an  interested
                shareholder and  prior  to  the  consummation  of such business
                combination:

                a.    There shall have been no failure to declare  and  pay, at
                      the  regular  date therefor, any full periodic dividends,
                      whether or not  cumulative,  on any outstanding preferred
                      stock of the corporation;

                b.    There shall have been no reduction  in the annual rate of
                      dividends paid on any class or series  of  stock  of  the
                      corporation  that  is  not  preferred  stock,  except  as
                      necessary to reflect any subdivision of the stock; and an
                      increase in such annual rate of dividends as necessary to
                      reflect any reclassification, including any reverse stock
                      split;  recapitalization;  reorganization; or any similar
                      transaction which has

                                      B-9
<PAGE>

                      the  effect of reducing the number of  outstanding shares
                      of the stock; and

                c.    The interested shareholder did not become  the beneficial
                      owner   of   any   additional  shares  of  stock  of  the
                      corporation, except  as  part  of  the  transaction which
                      resulted  in  such  interested  shareholder  becoming  an
                      interested  shareholder  or  by  virtue  of proportionate
                      stock splits or stock dividends.


    
           2.   The  provisions of sub-subparagraphs a. and b. of  subparagraph
                1. of  this paragraph do not apply if no interested shareholder
                or an affiliate  or  associate  of  the  interested shareholder
                voted as a director of the corporation in a manner inconsistent
                with  such  sub-subparagraphs  and the interested  shareholder,
                within  ten  (10)  days  after  any  act   or  failure  to  act
                inconsistent with such sub-subparagraphs, notifies the board of
                directors  of  the corporation in writing that  the  interested
                shareholder disapproves thereof and requests in good faith that
                the board of directors rectify such act or failure to act. 
    
   

(3)  (a)   Whether  or  not  such  business   combinations  are  authorized  or
           consummated in whole or in part after  July  13,  1984, or after the
           interested   shareholder  became  an  interested  shareholder,   the
           requirements  of   KRS   271B.12-210   do   not  apply  to  business
           combinations that specifically, generally, or generally by types, as
           to  specifically  identified  or  unidentified  existing  or  future
           interested shareholders or their affiliates or associates, have been
           approved  or  exempted  therefrom  by  resolution  of the  board  of
           directors of the corporation prior to two (2) months  after July 13,
           1984,  or  such  earlier  date as may be irrevocably established  by
           resolution of the board of directors; and

     (b)   Unless by its terms a resolution  adopted  under  this subsection is
           made  irrevocable,  it may be altered or repealed by  the  board  of
           directors, but this shall  not affect any business combinations that
           have been consummated, or are  the  subject of an existing agreement
           entered into, prior to the alteration or repeal.

(4)  (a)   Unless the articles of incorporation  or  bylaws  of the corporation
           specifically provide otherwise, the requirements of  KRS 271B.12-210
           do not apply to business combinations of a corporation that, on July
           13, 1984, had an existing interested shareholder, whether a business
           combination  is  with  the  existing  shareholder or with any  other
           person who becomes an interested shareholder,  after  July 13, 1984,
           or  their  present  or future affiliates, unless, at any time  after
           July 13, 1984, the board  of  directors of the corporation elects by
           resolution, adopted by a majority  of  the continuing directors at a
           meeting of the board of directors at which a quorum

                                      B-10
<PAGE>

           consisting of at least  a  majority of  the  continuing directors is
           present,  to  be  subject,  in  whole  or  in  part,  specifically,
           generally,  or generally by types, as to  specifically identified or
           unidentified  interested  shareholders,  to  the  requirements  of
           KRS 271B.12-210.

     (b)   The  articles of incorporation or  bylaws  of  the  corporation  may
           provide  that  if  the  board of directors adopts a resolution under
           paragraph (a) of this subsection, the resolution shall be subject to
           approval of the shareholders in the manner and by the vote specified
           in the articles of incorporation or the bylaws;

     (c)   An election under this subsection  may  be  added  to but may not be
           altered  or  repealed  except  by  an  amendment to the articles  of
           incorporation  adopted  by  a  vote  of  shareholders   meeting  the
           requirements of subsection (5)(a)2. of this section; and

     (d)   If a corporation elects under this subsection to be included  within
           the  provisions  of KRS 271B.12-210 generally, without qualification
           or limitation, it shall file with the secretary of state articles of
           amendment, including  a  copy  of the resolution making the election
           and a statement describing the manner  in  which  the resolution was
           adopted. The articles of amendment, shall be executed  in the manner
           required by KRS 271B.10-060.

(5)  (a)   Unless  the  articles  of  incorporation of the corporation  provide
           otherwise, the requirements of a shareholder vote and board approval
           in KRS 271B.12-210 do not apply to any business combination of:

           1.   A corporation which does  not  have  on the date any interested
                shareholder became an interested shareholder:

                a.    Five  hundred  (500)  or more beneficial  owners  of  its
                      stock;

                b.    Its principal executive office located in this state; and

                c.    One (1) or more of the following:

                      (i)  More than two hundred (200) beneficial owners of its
                           stock residing in this state;

                      (ii) More than ten percent (10%) of the beneficial owners
                           of its stock residing in this state;

                      (iii)More than ten percent (10%) of its outstanding stock
                           owned by residents of this state;

                                      B-11

<PAGE>

                      (iv) More  than  one  hundred   (100)  employees  of  the
                           corporation and its subsidiaries working within this
                           state; or

                      (v)  Assets located in this state  and owned by, or owned
                           by a person or entity controlled by, the corporation
                           with  a  value  of  at  least  one  million  dollars
                           ($1,000,000);

           2.   A corporation whose original articles of incorporation  have  a
                provision,  or  whose  shareholders  adopt  an amendment to the
                articles of incorporation after July 13, 1984,  by a vote of at
                least eighty percent (80%) of the votes entitled  to be cast by
                outstanding  shares of voting stock of the corporation,  voting
                together as a  single  voting group and two-thirds (2/3) of the
                votes entitled to be cast  by  persons,  if  any,  who  are not
                interested shareholders of the corporation, voting together  as
                a single voting group, expressly electing not to be governed by
                KRS 271B.12-210; or

           3.   An  investment  company registered under the federal Investment
                Company Act of 1940,  as  amended;  a  bank  or  a bank holding
                company as defined in the federal Bank Holding Company  Act  of
                1956, as amended; a savings and loan holding company as defined
                in  the  federal Savings and Loan Holding Company Amendments of
                1967, as amended;  and  a domestic insurer as defined under KRS
                304.1-070; and

(b)  For purposes of subparagraph 1. of paragraph  (a)  of this subsection, all
     shareholders of a corporation who have executed an agreement  to which the
     corporation is an executing party governing the purchase and sale of stock
     of  the  corporation  or a voting trust agreement governing stock  of  the
     corporation shall be considered  a  single  beneficial  owner of the stock
     covered by the agreement.

                                      B-12

<PAGE>

271B.12-230 KRS 271B.12-200 TO 271B.12-220 PREVAIL OVER OTHER PROVISIONS OF KRS
CHAPTER 271B; SEVERABILITY OF PROVISIONS

(1)  The provisions of KRS 271B.12-200 to 271B.12-220 are in addition to and do
     not  repeal  any  other  provisions  of KRS Chapter 271B that  govern  any
     corporate actions described in KRS 271B.12-200  to  271B.12-220; provided,
     that  in  the  event  of  a direct conflict between any provision  of  KRS
     271B.12-200 to 271B.12-220  and  any  other provision of KRS Chapter 271B,
     the provision of KRS 271B.12-200 to 271B.12-220 shall prevail.

(2)  It shall be considered that, for the purposes  of  KRS  446.090, it is the
     intent of the general assembly in enacting KRS 271B.12-200  to 271B.12-220
     that  any clause, sentence, subparagraph, paragraph, subsection,  section,
     or other  part  of the above-stated sections or the application thereof to
     any person or circumstances held to be invalid shall not affect, impair or
     invalidate the remainder of the stated sections or the application of that
     part held invalid  to  any  other  person  or  circumstances, but shall be
     confined   in  its  operation  to  the  clause,  sentence,   subparagraph,
     paragraph, subsection, section, or other part thereof directly involved in
     that holding or to the person or circumstances therein involved.

                                      B-13

<PAGE>
                             APPENDIX TO PROXY STATEMENT


                                    FORM OF PROXY
<PAGE>

                THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
                                    MIDAMERICA BANCORP
                                     500 WEST BROADWAY
                                   LOUISVILLE, KY  40202
                           PROXY-ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

               The undersigned, a shareholder of MIDAMERICA BANCORP, a Kentucky
corporation  (the "Company") hereby appoints BERTRAM W. KLEIN, ORSON OLIVER and
ROBERT H. SACHS,  and  each  of them, the true and lawful attorneys and proxies
with full power of substitution,  for  and  in the name, place and stead of the
undersigned, to vote all of the shares of Common Stock of the Company which the
undersigned  would  be entitled to vote if personally  present  at  the  Annual
Meeting of Shareholders  to  be held in the William Ray Gallery of the Kentucky
Derby  Museum at Churchill Downs,  704  Central  Avenue,  Louisville,  Kentucky
40208, on  April  16,  1998,  at  10:00 a.m., Eastern Daylight time, and at any
adjournment thereof.

The undersigned hereby instructs said proxies or their substitutes:

1.      ELECTION OF DIRECTORS.
        NOMINEES:      ROBERT P. ADELBERG,  HON.  MARTHA  LAYNE  COLLINS, R. K.
                       GUILLAUME, DAVID JONES, JR., BERTRAM W. KLEIN, AND BRUCE
                       ROTH
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>            <C>                                       <C>
        [  ]   Vote FOR all nominees listed above        [  ]  WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote
               (except those written in below)                 for all nominees listed above
</TABLE>

INSTRUCTION:   To withhold authority to vote for any individual nominee write
               that nominees name in the space below.


_______________________________________________________________________________
|AMENDMENTS TO ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION (2, 3 and 4).   Check the appropriate |
|box here to vote with respect to ALL THREE OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENTS AS A    |
|GROUP.  Use number 2, 3, and 4 below to vote individually on each of the three|
|proposed Amendments.                                                          |
|                                                                              |
|               [  ]  Vote FOR     [  ]  Vote AGAINST      [  ]  ABSTAIN       |
|______________________________________________________________________________|

2.      AMENDMENT TO ARTICLE IX OF THE ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION.   To  require
        certain transactions involving fundamental changes in corporate
        structure to be approved by a supermajority vote of shareholders.


               [  ]  Vote FOR     [  ]  Vote AGAINST      [  ]  ABSTAIN


3.      AMENDMENT TO ARTICLE X OF  THE  ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION.  To elect to
        be governed under the provisions  of  the Kentucky Business Combination
        Act.


               [  ]  Vote FOR     [  ]  Vote AGAINST      [  ]  ABSTAIN


4.      AMENDMENT TO ARTICLE XI OF THE ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION.  To require a
        supermajority vote of shareholders to change  certain provisions of the
        Articles of Incorporation.


               [  ]  Vote FOR     [  ]  Vote AGAINST      [  ]  ABSTAIN

_______________________________________________________________________________

5.      DISCRETIONARY  AUTHORITY.   To vote with discretionary  authority  with
        respect  to  all other matters  which  may  properly  come  before  the
        meeting.

This proxy, when properly  executed,  will  be  voted  in  accordance  with any
directions hereinbefore given.  Unless otherwise specified, this proxy will  be
voted FOR the nominees named above, FOR each of the ammendments to the Articles
of  Incorporation  and  with  the  discretionary  authority  described  in  the
accompanying  proxy  statement.   MANAGEMENT  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE FOR ALL OF THE
ABOVE.

The undersigned hereby revokes all proxies heretofore given  and  ratifies  and
confirms  all  that  the  proxies  appointed  hereby,  or any of them, or their
substitutes,  may  lawfully  do  or  cause to be done by virtue  thereof.   The
undersigned hereby acknowledges receipt  of  a  copy  of  the  Notice of Annual
Meeting  and  Proxy  Statement,  both  dated March 19, 1998 and a copy  of  the
Company's Annual Report for the period ended December 31, 1997.

                                   Please sign exactly as shares are registered.
                                   If shares  are  held  by  joint tenants, all
                                   parties in the joint tenancy must sign. When
                                   signing as attorney, executor, administrator,
                                   trustee  or  guardian  please  indicate  the
                                   capacity in which signing. If a corporation,
                                   please  sign  in  full  corporate  name  by
                                   president or other authorized  officer. If a
                                   partnership, please sign in partnership name
                                   by authorized person.



                                   ____________________________________________
                                   Signature                     Date

                                   ____________________________________________
                                   Signature, if held jointly    Date



    


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