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The 1964 NCAA College Division basketball tournament involved 32 schools playing in a single-elimination tournament to determine the national champion of men's NCAA College Division college basketball as a culmination of the 1963–64 NCAA College Division men's basketball season.
Evansville Bosse Jim Myers 26-2 East Chicago Washington 84-81 1962-63 Muncie Central Dwight Tallman 28-1 South Band Central 65-61 1963-64 Lafayette Jefferson Marion Crawley 28-1 Huntington 58-55 1964-65 Indianapolis Washington Jerry Oliver: 29-2 Fort Wayne North Side 64-57 1965-66 Michigan City Elston Doug Adams 26-3 Indianapolis Technical 63-52
Plainfield Red Pride Band East Noble Marching Knights Recent Education News: 'My story is their story': Pike teacher Graciela Miranda wins Indiana Teacher of the year
The school was initially financed by Benjamin Bosse, who was the mayor of Evansville from 1914 to 1922. Construction began on the school in 1922 and opened for its first pupils in 1924, serving what was then the east side of Evansville. Bosse's boys basketball team won the state championship in 1944 the first area team to do so. The school won ...
The first public event held at the Ford Center was an Evansville IceMen hockey game on November 5, 2011, when the IceMen defeated the Fort Wayne Komets 3–1. The first concert was held four days later on November 9, 2011, by Bob Seger and his Silver Bullet Band.
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River Brass (formerly the Bend in the River Brass Band) [1] was established in 1991 as a community band. Over the years, the band has developed into a high-caliber competing band. The group took its original name from the ox bow bend of the Ohio River that separates the cities of Evansville, Indiana and Henderson, Kentucky.
Interstate 164 (I-164) was a spur highway of I-64, between that highway and U.S. Highway 41 (US 41) in Evansville, Indiana.I-164, also known as the Robert D. Orr Highway, had a total length of 21.24 miles (34.18 km) and was the only auxiliary route of I-64 in Indiana.