Word: indianapolises
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When the Baltimore Colts (of the NFL) left the city for Indianapolis ten years ago, one sportscaster cried on the air.
Church leaders intended to keep the 68-page report under wraps until the bishops had voted on it Aug. 24 during the church's convention in Indianapolis. But last week a conservative caucus, Episcopalians United, of Solon, Ohio, defiantly published the secret document in an effort to rally opposition.
Richard Dooling is impartially derisive in his caustic second novel, White Man's Grave (Farrar, Straus & Giroux; 386 pages; $22). He chucks a custard pie at every face that shows itself. There's Randall Killigan, an Indianapolis attorney who glories in the dismemberment allowed by bankruptcy law: the wrenching of...
In many large U.S. cities, a new breed of chief executive is performing fiscal triage. Urban reformers from both parties have fixed on programs grounded in austerity, responsibility, safer streets and the wooing of business through lower taxes. Managers rather than politicians, they apply private-sector solutions to chronic urban...
Quayle was unavailable for comment yesterday and members of his staff in Indianapolis said they did not know if the Quayles would accept the invitation. But they added that Quayle "does not yet have firms plans for the fall."