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Baltimore Update: A Forceful Mom And A Fan-Free Baseball Game

A woman holds a sign telling protesters to go home in Baltimore Tuesday night; a curfew and community intervention are being credited with helping ease tensions in the city.
John Taggart EPA /LANDOV
A woman holds a sign telling protesters to go home in Baltimore Tuesday night; a curfew and community intervention are being credited with helping ease tensions in the city.

The streets of Baltimore were quieter Tuesday night, a day after over vandalism and rioting sparked a curfew. Today, the Orioles plan to play an MLB game without an audience, and a woman who yanked her son away from potential trouble is making headlines.

The shift in topics is a relief in a city that saw the National Guard deployed and a 10 p.m. curfew instituted after Monday's violence. Despite reports that some people refused to leave the streets and threw objects at police last night, Baltimore was relatively quiet.

For Michael Graham, 16, a mask and hoodie weren't enough to fool his mother, who spotted him in an unruly group that was throwing rocks at police Monday. In an incident that was caught on video, she grabbed and hit him, yelling at him as she pulled him away from the crowd.

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"That's my only son, and at the end of the day I don't want him to be a Freddie Gray," Toya Graham told CBS News, referring to the man whose death after being arrested has caused a furor.

"But to stand up there and vandalize police officers – that's not justice. I'm a single mom, I have six children. And I just choose not to live like that no more. And I don't want that for him."

Of her reaction that has now become famous – a video of her disciplining her son has been seen millions of times on YouTube — Graham says, "I was angry, I was shocked. Because you never want to see your child out there, doing that."

Graham's words underline an article by the Baltimore City Paper, which profiled black women who have been organizing and marshaling protesters in the city. Several were drawn to community activism after a relative died following a police beating, the newspaper said.

Days after the riots forced the Baltimore Orioles to postpone two games, the team says it will play the Chicago White Sox today – but despite a forecast of sunny skies and 70-degree weather for the 2 p.m. start time, no fans will be allowed into the stadium.

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"After consultation with Major League Baseball and City and local officials," the team said Tuesday, "tomorrow's game... will be closed to the public."

It's reportedly the first time in MLB's history that a game will take place without a live audience. The Orioles will make up the two other games against the Sox in a double-header on Thursday.

Today's headline for The Baltimore Sun is, "Under guard, Baltimore cleans up and looks ahead."

On Tuesday, the paper spoke with gang members who had joined members of the City Council to urge and end to the violence.

An excerpt:

"If we can stick together doing something negative, then we can stick together doing something positive," the man identified as "Trey" said. "I need a job. Most of the youths need a job. We need help. It ain't right what people was doing, but you've got to understand. Some people are struggling."

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.