Obituary for Jean Bender From Koehler Funeral Home-Boonville and Chandler
Gentryville, IN. – Jean (Sisk) Bender, 74, of Gentryville, Indiana passed away on Thursday, March 7, 2019, at her home.
Obituary for Jean Bender From Koehler Funeral Home-Boonville and Chandler
Gentryville, IN. – Jean (Sisk) Bender, 74, of Gentryville, Indiana passed away on Thursday, March 7, 2019, at her home.
by MASON BROTHERS FUNERAL HOME-EVANSVILLE
Mary was a faithful servant at Seventh Street Baptist Church in Henderson. She was preceded in death by her husband, Frank Long; her sister, Dorothy McFarland; her brother, John Richard Brown; her granddaughter, Mary Chalonda Woodruff; and her grandsons: Jason Woodruff and Chalon Woodruff.
Mary leaves to cherish her life, one son, James Richard Woodruff who resides in their childhood home; beloved grandchildren: Jamie Evonne Woodruff of Olathe KS, Tabrisha Ruby of Tampa FL, James D. Hay of Henderson KY; 8 great-grandchildren; and a host of nieces, cousins, friends.
Services are Friday, March 15, 2019, at 12:00 noon at 7th Street Missionary Baptist Church in Henderson with same day visitation from 10:00 am until service time at the church. Burial at Fernwood Cemetery in Henderson. Mason Brothers Audubon Chapel is in charge of arrangements. Condolences may be left at www.masonbrothersfs.com
To send flowers or a memorial gift to the family of Mary Eliza Long please visit our Sympathy Store.
Vanderburgh County: Indiana State Police obtained an arrest warrant yesterday for Jerome Lee, 36, of Evansville, for Dealing in Synthetic Marijuana, a Class 6 Felony. Lee’s arrest stems from a criminal investigation conducted by Indiana State Police and Indiana State Parole Agents that netted 14 lbs. of synthetic marijuana and a stolen firearm on February 21.
Lee is being held in the Vanderburgh County Jail on the following criminal charges:
University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball rolled by the  University of Missouri-St Louis, 87-61, in the first round of the Great Lakes Valley Conference Tournament Thursday night at Vadalabene Center in Edwardsville, Illinois. The Screaming Eagles, the third seed, rises to 22-7, while the Tritons ends the season, 20-9.
With the win, the Eagles advance to play second-seeded and 13th-ranked Bellarmine University Saturday at 2:30 p.m. in the GLVC Tournament semifinals. The Knights move on to Saturday’s game after defeating seventh-seeded Rockhurst University in overtime, 75-64, to rise to 24-4. USI and Bellarmine split the season series this year, each winning on the other’s home court.
The Eagles lead the all-time series with Bellarmine overall, 51-43, and last defeated the Knights in the GLVC Tournament in the 2014 championship game at the Ford Center in Evansville, Indiana. The 2014 tournament was the last time USI won the GLVC championship.
USI senior guard Alex Stein (Evansville, Indiana) hit a three-point bomb to start game and senior forward Jacob Norman (Evansville, Indiana) followed with a dunk to set the tone in the first half the Eagles.
The Eagles methodically built a 12-point lead by the 13:46 minute mark of the opening half when senior guard/forward Nate Hansen (Evansville, Indiana) hit a long range bucket to make the score 21-9. UMSL rallied and cut the lead to five, 25-20, at 11:05 and 28-23 at 8:09, but that would be as close as Tritons would come the rest of the game.
USI ended the opening stanza with a 12-0 run get the lead up 18 points, 44-26, before taking a 44-29 advantage into the intermission. The Eagles were on point from the field during the opening half, hitting 51.5 percent (17-33) of their shots, and were led by Stein, who led the shooters with 20 points.
Stein was a blistering seven-of-nine from the field, three-of-four from long range, and three-of-three from the stripe in the first half.
In the second half, the Triton were able to cut the USI margin to 11 points twice before the Eagles pulled away for good. USI extended the lead to as many as 26 points twice, including the final score of 87-61.
Stein added seven second-half points and finished with a game-high 27 points, leading four Eagles in double-digits. He concluded action 10-of-14 from the field.
Junior guard/forward Kobe Caldwell (Bowling Green, Kentucky) followed Stein in the scoring column with 15 points on six-of-11 from of the field, including a three-point field goal and two-of-two from the stripe. He also grabbed a team-high eight rebounds.
Norman was a perfect five-of-five from the outside and three-of-four from the stripe to finish with a season-high 13 points, while following Caldwell on the glass with seven boards. Hansen rounded out the double-digit scorers with 11 points.
Aces fight to the finish before falling 65-60
 Entering Arch Madness as the #10 seed, the University of Evansville men’s basketball team gave #7 Illinois State everything it had, but the Redbirds were able to hang on for a 65-60 win at the Enterprise Center on Thursday night.
“I thought we played a very hard-fought game. We played about as good as we could have; we had opportunities to win this game,†Aces head coach Walter McCarty said after the game. “I thought our game plan was very good and our guys did a nice job of following it. We had a few unlucky bounces that Illinois State was able to take advantage of.â€
Marty Hill, one of four finalists in the Dark Horse Dunker competition, led the way with 16 points. He knocked down three triples. K.J. Riley finished with 15 points and added six more free throws to his season tally.
“We missed a lot of threes and ISU made a lot of tough shots,†Riley said. “We played well tonight, but it just did not go our way. I really wanted to win it for our seniors.â€
Evansville missed its first 11 shots from the field, but the defense did a strong job as Illinois State took just a 7-1 lead. Just past the 5-minute mark, John Hall and Evan Kuhlman hit back-to-back buckets to get the Aces within two. The Redbirds continued to lead throughout the first half until the Aces made a run in the final four minutes.
Trailing 22-17 inside of the 4-minute mark, Evan Kuhlman and K.J. Riley hit consecutive 3-pointers to give Evansville its first lead at 23-22. An and-one by Riley on the next trip down the floor pushed the lead to 26-22, capping off a 9-0 run. Illinois State closed back in, but it was the Aces taking a 28-27 lead into the break. Riley led UE with nine points in the period while the team notched a total of 10 offensive boards in the first 20 minutes.
Illinois State rebounded in the opening moments of the second half as they opened up on an 11-2 stretch to go up 38-30 five minutes into the half. Evan Kuhlman made a big play to get UE back in it, knocking down all three free throws to cut the deficit to five, but ISU bounced back with six in a row to push their lead to double figures for the first time.
The Aces never gave up and closed back in. After trailing 44-33, Evansville rallied with 12 in a row while keeping ISU scoreless for five minutes. John Hall knocked down a pair of free throws, Hill had an and-one and Kuhlman capped it off with a bucket to put the Aces back in front by a 45-44 score with eight minutes on the clock.
ISU came back once again with a 9-2 stretch that pushed their lead to six points at the 5-minute mark. The Aces got back within three tallies on a Noah Frederking trey before ISU went back up by six in the final minute. Evansville never relented, showing the fight they have had all season. With 21 ticks left, Hall was true from outside to make it a one-possession game (63-60) once again, but ISU hung on for the 65-60 win.
Kuhlman and Hall each finished the game with ten points. ISU shot 36.2% for the game while UE shot 29.5%. The rebounded edge went to Illinois State by a 43-42 tally.
UE wraps up the season with a mark of 11-21, but has bigger things ahead with its returning core as well as newcomers Sam Cunliffe, Artur Labinowicz, DeAndre Williams, Peace Ilegomah and Marcus Henderson.
I appreciate the efforts of our team, we got better each and every game of the season,†McCarty said when reflecting on the season. “Despite our record, it was fun to come to work every single day. It was a fun year and I have a great time coaching these guys. They were all very fun to be around.â€
University of Southern Indiana Women’s Tennis wrapped up a three-match slate in the sunshine state with a 5-2 loss to St. Cloud State University at the United States Tennis Association National Campus on Thursday.
Freshman Kylie Skepnek (Algonquin, Illinois) tallied the first point for the Screaming Eagles with her 6-0, 6-1 final in No. 3 Singles.
Freshman Lindsey McCord (Greenfield, Indiana) scored the second USI point, in No. 5 Singles, after going into a third-set tie-breaker.
Despite USI ultimately ceding the doubles point, juniors Lauren Hambrock (Terre Haute, Indiana) and Alex Jamison (Floyds Knobs, Indiana) claimed victory in Doubles No. 1 play, 6-2.
USI Women’s Tennis returns to Evansville on March 16 to take on Murray State University. Competition at the USI Tennis Courts will begin at 11 a.m.
We hope that today’s “READERS FORUMâ€Â will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way?
WHAT’S ON YOUR MIND TODAY?
Todays“Readers Poll†question is: Do you feel that the taxpayer should subsidize the Evansville Thunderbolts?
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