The Daily Arts guide to the best upcoming events - it's everywhere you should be this weekend and why. AT BURTON If you've never been inside Burton Memorial Tower, tomorrow night's musicology department distinguished lecture will let you climb inside the clock - and learn about Stravinsky. Dr. Roland John Wiley will lecture on Igor Stravinsky at 5 p.m. in Room 506. The event is free. A match made in music heaven 1. Bob Dylan and his Band with Elvis Costello (Oct.12 at Eastern Michigan University Convocation Center) Two of the most popular artists on the University student's "This changed my life!" playlist, the master songsmiths have joined up for the last leg of Dylan's most recent tour, including a date just down the road at EMU's Convocation Center. The tour marks Costello's first solo outing in a dozen years, and Dylan is coming off the excellent Modern Times. Scramble for tickets when they go on sale tomorrow at 10 a.m. and pray for a beauti- fully wheezy duet of "Pump It Up." KIMBERLY CHOU See PREVIEWS, Page 2B "T V PRE"E'W A cheerleader Smost mysterious 1. "Heroes" season two Sept. 24 on NBC NBC's X-Men return this fall after one the most bizarre, uncon- ventional season finales of the year. Half the cast ended up dead, the bad guy escaped and we still don't understand what the hell "sav ing the cheerleader" had to do with "saving the world." This season TESY OF looks to answer these questions, introduce new heroes and explore MIRAMAX old favorites. Find out who's dead, who's alive and who's in feudal ardem as Japan. a violent PAUL TASSI drifter in "No See PREVIEWS, Page 2B oetn or FI PE Nothing like a sure thing 1. "American Gangster" (Nov. 2) If Ridley Scott directed a movie starring Russell Crowe and Denzel Washington, it could be about a sudden-death ping-pong tournament and it would still win six Oscars. "American Gangster" is rather about a self-made '70s crime lord (Denzel) who clashes with a cop (Crowe) as he builds his empire by hiding heroin in the caskets of dead soldiers returningfrom Vietnam. It's like when you saw the first "Departed" trailer last year and just said "Oscar." This one will live on. PAUL TASSI See PREVIEWS, Page 2B FINE A RTSPEVIE W A macabre touch of humor 1. School of Music, Theatre & Dance's "Our Lady of 121st St." For the Theatre & Drama Department's first production in the new Arthur Miller Theatre, Theater Prof. John Neville-Andrews chose contemporary playwright Stephen Adly Guirgis, whose "In Arabia, We'd All Be Kings" sold out several nights at the now-razed Frieze Building three years ago. "These characters are all in some way damaged, and because they're damaged, they're prone to being vulnerable," Neville-Andrews said. Though the play's premise sounds macabre - it begins with the theft of a body from a wake - Neville-Andrews insisted that the play is largely comedic. See PREVIEWS, Page 2B AT THE MIC Since childhood, Craig Gass is a stand-up come- dian and famous impres- sionist. Witness his hilarious interpretations this weekend at the Ann Arbor Comedy Showcase, with performances start- ing tonight at 8 p.m. Tick- ets are $20 at the door. AT THE MICHIGAN Remember when you loved "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" in high school? We still do. Here's your chance to watch the Joss Whedon series' excel- lent musical episode on the big screen tomorrow night at the Michigan. Sarah Michelle Gellar can't really sing, but the guy that plays Spike? Damn. The show starts at 11:55 p.m. and tickets are $6.75 with student ID. What would Arthur Miller do? By KIMBERLY CHOU AssociateArts Editor it's old news by now: Arthur Mill- er hada son with Down Syndrome whom he kept hidden from public attention for 40 years. But anything about the late playwright is news, given his sainted status in the Unit- ed States - and nowhere more so than here at his alma mater. So when Suzanna Andrews's fea- FI LE PHOTO ture on Miller, tucked in the pages of Vanity Fair's fashion issue, reached newsstands a week ago, observers lapped at the seeming expose on his secret son. Pundits posited, fans vented on blogs and newspapers fumbled with metaphors involv- ing life and theater. Miller's friends declined to comment. Ironically, the details of the story would have been perfect for a Miller drama. Arthur Miller married his third wife, photographer Inge Morath, in 1962. Shortly after, they had daugh- ter Rebecca, Miller's third child and the one that most - including the writer himself - acknowledged as his youngest. But three years later, the couple had another child. The boy, Daniel, was born with Down Syndrome and institutionalized a week after his birth. These are the facts. Daniel is not mentioned in Miller's autobiogra- phy, "Timebends," or in Morath's 2002 obituary. The one American newspaper to mention Daniel in Miller's obituary, the L.A. Times, See MILLER, Page 4B AT THE PIG DJs Brad Hales and Robert Wells are becoming well- known fixtures for their soulful outings at the Pig once a month. Spinning rare soul tracks, includ- ing original northern soul, tamla-Motown, R&B and crossover records, the duo ensures you'll be danc- ing each time, every time. Tomorrow night's tickets are $5 for 21 and over, $8 for under 21. Must be 18+. Posthumously confronting what Miller could not.