Today’s entertainment picks:


Today’s entertainment picks:

v Summer Festival of the Arts, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.: This annual event on the Youngstown State University campus features and art market, entertainment and more (free admission). Go to ysu.edu/sfa for schedule. Free admission.

v Summerfest, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.: Greek food, music and culture at St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church, 220 N. Walnut St., Youngstown, near Choffin Career Center and just a short stroll away from the Summer Festival of the Arts at YSU.

v Fiction Forest, 3 p.m. to midnight: Top regional bands, including Spirit of the Bear, The Lighthouse and the Whaler and the Labra Brothers in a daylong concert ($20) at West Side Bowl, 2615 Mahoning Ave., Youngstown.

v Freed Fest, 7:30 p.m.: A day of live music at several locations in downtown Salem; freedfest.com.

v Wine and Jazz Fest, 6 p.m.: Norman Brown will headline this concert ($10 and $25) at the Youngstown Foundation Amphitheatre.

“Hanging with the Henderson” (9 p.m., Animal Planet): The hilarious and big-hearted Henderson clan from Colorado’s Fox Hollow Animal Hospital returns to Animal Planet for the second season.

ENTERTAINMENT NEWS

Parto’s offers golf camp for children

YOUNGSTOWN

Parto’s Golf Learning Center, 2231 Coitsville Hubbard Road, will present its Junior Golf Summer Camp Monday through Friday, from 10:30 a.m. to noon each day.

The fee is $65 per child. The camp will offer golf instruction, including etiquette, basics and play on the par 3 course.

For information or to register, call 330-743-6718.

Hollywood horn band reunites for a concert

BOARDMAN

Hollywood, a horn band that recreates classics by the likes of Tower of Power, Chicago, Blood Sweat & Tears, Paul Simon, Steely Dan, Kansas and Foreigner, will reunite for a concert at 7 p.m. tonight in the Boardman Performing Arts Center, 7777 Glenwood Ave. Admission is $10 ($5 for students).

The members of Hollywood included many alumni of Younstown State University’s Jazz Ensemble 1 and others. The act was very popular in the Mahoning Valley in the early ’90s.

Author gives $1M Mark Twain home

HARTFORD, Conn.

The historic home in Hartford where Mark Twain and his family once lived has received a $1 million gift from bestselling novelist David Baldacci and his wife.

The Mark Twain House & Museum says the gift is expected to support new initiatives including writing programs and more appearances by authors.

Baldacci, who has published 38 books, has served on the board of trustees of the Twain House since 2012.

Baldacci tells the Hartford Courant that he’s a huge fan of Mark Twain, whose real name was Samuel Clemens, and has read everything he ever wrote. Baldacci says the famed author not only made a huge impression on him through his writing, but how he conducted his life.

Clemens lived in the Hartford home from 1874 to 1891.