The plot you provided is only resolved to the bock level. Assuming it is accurate of your location:
In general, I am against indoor antennas. If you are dead set on an indoor antenna, A leaf may work for the group of stations between 60 degrees true and 63 degrees true, depending on how high you put it, what wall it is on, what direction it faces, what your house is made of, what is near your house, and any other signal blocking considerations. The signals in the linked plot are very good, so do not get an amplified antenna. You have VHF-high stations, so I would not consider a leaf antenna for the group of stations between 115 degrees true and 149 degrees true. For those stations, I would look at a Terk HDTVi antenna.
When the FCC was figuring out coverage for stations post digital transition, they assumed people would have moderate gain outdoor antennas 30’ in the air. So as long as there is a safe way to put up an outdoor antenna, I would always recommend putting one up. HOA’s can only limit antenna installs in very specific situations, the FCC protects your right to put up antennas for TV reception.
http://www.fcc.gov/guides/installing...tellite-dishes
At the block level, you have very good reception conditions. If I lived at that plot, on my roof on a 12’ tall combination of a pole and tripod I would get 2 HBU22’s, point one at the group of stations between 115 degrees true and 149 degrees true, point the other at the group of stations between 60 degrees true and 63 degrees true and use an AB switch or the TV’s tuner and a separate OTA tuner at the TV to switch between the two groups of stations.