10 Things

10 Things to Know Today

by The Associated Press

MLB resumes in Baltimore, but without the fans; one family loses 18 in Nepal earthquake; Kennedy sends less clear signal in marriage case and more national and international news for Wednesday, April 29, 2015.

1. BALTIMORE STREETS QUIET UNDER CURFEW

"We do not have a lot of active movement throughout the city as a whole. Tonight I think the biggest thing is the citizens are safe, the city is stable," says Baltimore Police Commissioner Anthony Batts.

2. NEPALESE FAMILY MOURNS 18 LOST IN SINGLE HOUSE COLLAPSE

"I don't know why this happened. But I don't blame anyone," says Shankar Pradhan, who now needs to prepare 18 souls for the Hindu cremation rite.

3. WHO SENDS CLEARER SIGNAL IN 2013 MARRIAGE CASE

Justice Anthony Kennedy leaves little doubt during Supreme Court arguments in 2013 that a part of the federal anti-gay marriage law was doomed.

4. IMMIGRANT REMOVALS CONTINUE TO DECLINE

The Obama administration is on pace to deport the fewest number of immigrants in nearly a decade.

5. HOW AUSTRALIA REACTS TO INDONESIA EXECUTIONS

Canberra takes the unprecedented retaliation of withdrawing its ambassador after Indonesian authorities executed two Australian drug traffickers.

6. NEW GENERATION ASCENDS IN SAUDI ARABIA

The king removes his half-brother from the post of crown prince, replacing him with his nephew, and elevates his son to the position of deputy crown prince.

7. HORROR, GRIEF DARKEN THEATER SHOOTING VICTIMS' TESTIMONY

Survivors provide gripping accounts of the night when 12 people were killed and dozens injured.

8. FOR AFGHANISTAN'S ABANDONED CHILDREN, HELP IS SCARCE

The country has much of its services devastated by the conflict and has little capacity to care for them.

9. WHAT VIETNAMESE-AMERICANS RECALL SINCE SAIGON FELL

The thousands who fled Vietnam still remember what they lost, but also take the moment to think about what they've gained in the U.S.

10. BASEBALL RETURNING TO BALTIMORE — BUT WITH A TWIST

After a pair of postponements because of the city's unsettled environment, the White Sox will play the Orioles Wednesday in a game that will be closed to the public.