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Tony Gwynn's Second Base: Indianapolis

"I just want to be normal again," says the occasional Hoosier. "It’s not normal to be shopping and have people yelling just your name in the aisles."
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Tunnel Vision: What Lies Beneath Indy

Mining the city’s first-ever deep tunnel and the largest public-works project in Indianapolis’s history has required the help of experts from all over the country.

Photos: 2014's Record-Breaking Indy Pride

A law enforcement leader says 92,000 comers descended on Indy Pride's annual LGBT festival downtown, with roughly 35,000 goers at the companion parade.
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New at the IMA: 19th-Century Selfies

Here, a quick snapshot of the latest IMA exhibit’s only self-portraits.

The Cure for Josh Kaufman Withdrawal

Look for the wonderfully weird 18-year-old to go far on this season of So You Think You Can Dance, an unsung summer delight.

Tweets of the Week: 'The Fault' Film, Horse Racing & Celebs...

Via @JoshuaOwen: "The saddest part of The Fault In Our Stars, was definitely when Augustus fell into the chocolate river and got sucked up into the tube. Sorry for the spoiler."
On a trip overseas in March, Donnelly met with President Shimon Peres in Israel. (Photo provided)

The Man in the Middle: Joe Donnelly

In a chamber where one party enjoys a thin majority, Indiana's junior senator has garnered disproportionate influence as one of a handful of Democratic legislators from red and purple states who hold swing votes.

Photos: Indy Pet Pride 2014

Hundreds of humans and pets descended on Garfield Park for a record-breaking romp that included pet pools, food trucks, and a canine-couture show.
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10 Fun Father's Day Picks in Indy

Victory Field, consistently rated atop the heap of the nation's minor-league baseball stadiums, has multiple seating packages and a range of ballpark foods to devour. Plus, beer.
Hazel Grace (Shailene Woodley) and Augustus Waters (Ansel Elgort) in

Review: The Fault in Our Stars Film Stays Faithful

The film is certainly carried by the performances of Shailene Woodley and Ansel Elgort as its star-crossed, cancer-stricken couple, but it receives much-needed doses of gravitas and vigor from Willem Defoe as the eccentric author of the book over which Hazel and Augustus bond.