Today’s entertainment picks:
Today’s entertainment picks:
v Summertime, 6 p.m.: This Kenny Chesney tribute band will headline a show that also includes the Tom Frietchen Band, at the Warren Community Amphitheatre.
v “Little Shop of Horrors,” 8 p.m.: An alien plant has some strange needs. Kent-Trumbull Theatre, on Mahoning Avenue Northwest, Champion; 330-675-8887.
v “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas,” 7:30 p.m.: Rollicking musical at New Castle Playhouse, 202 E. Long Ave., New Castle, Pa.; 724-654-3437.
v Rockin’ the River concert, 5 p.m.: Dun Damage, with Voyage and Antoinette, Sofa King Cool Band, Nik Killa, 8th Street Rox and more in a concert to benefit the Wounded Warrior Project. It’s at the Riverwalk Amphitheater, East Washington Street in New Castle, Pa.; 724-654-8408.
v Jim Moran, 7 p.m.: Free outdoor concert at Churchill Park, Belmont Avenue, Liberty.
Writers group to meet at cafe
CANFIELD
Monday Night Writers will meet from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday at Peaberry’s Cafe, 4350 Boardman-Canfield Road.
Led by author and professional writer Nancy Christie, the session will explore the creative and business aspects of writing.
Those with works-in- progress will also have a chance to get comments and critiques on their work.
The fee is $10 per class, and registration is preferred.
For information, contact Nancy Christie at 330-793-3675 or at nancy@nancychristie.com.
Jackson doctor may lose license
SACRAMENTO, Calif.
The California attorney general’s office has accused Dr. Conrad Murray of incompetence and negligence in a bid to permanently revoke his medical license.
Murray, the physician convicted of felony involuntary manslaughter in the 2009 death of Michael Jackson, has already had his license suspended.
Suspended licenses can be renewed, but revoked licenses cannot.
The Los Angeles Times says the attorney general’s office added the new allegations in an ongoing Medical Board inquiry last month.
Murray’s lawyer Valerie Wass said the doctor will contest the new charges.
Rodin Museum reopens today
PHILADELPHIA
At the Rodin Museum in Philadelphia, everything old is new again.
It is reopening today after a more than three-year, $9 million renovation that returns the small museum’s galleries and landscaped gardens to the way its original architects intended when it opened in 1929.
The museum is between the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the new Barnes Foundation on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway.