the bsde The Michigan Daily ( michigandaily.com The Daily Arts guide to the best upcoming events - it's everywhere you should be this, weekend and why. AT RACKHAM Living up to its name, the Creative Arts Orchestra performs a set of origi- nal music this evening at Rackham Auditorium. The music is inspired by forms contemporary and classic, American and international. And there's one catch: it will all be improvised. The show starts at 8 p.m. Free. AT RACKHAM One of Michigan's most popular a cappella acts, The G-Men bring their high-octane brand of vocal, performance back to the stage this weekend with "Because 'A-Men' and 'C-Men' were taken..." The songs will range from Dis- ney favorites to disco hits to '80s dance-pop. Rack- ham Auditorium. 8 p.m. Friday. Student tickets $7. AT HATCHER While first-time visitors often marvel at the intimi- dating size of the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library collection, few people ever see even a tiny fraction of the library's catalogue. To show off the best parts of its collection, the Grad is rolling out its "Exhibit of Treasures" from 9 a.m. to noon on Friday. Free. Michigan Museum of Art',s new Frankel wing, two glass walls join neatly, push- ing toward State Street like the prow of a ship. Right now, the space they enclose isn't much - something more to walk around, though it affords a nice view of the recently installed Mark di Suvero sculpture "Orion." "Most people are surprised to find out that it's going to be a gallery," said UMMA director James Steward. Once UMMA reopens during winter term, after two years of renovations and new construction, the space will house temporary exhibitions of emerg- ing contemporary artists. "When we figured out how we were going to site the expansion, this is the space we first started thinking of to help us capture interest of people going past," Steward said. Work exhibited in this gallery will employ light, movement and other elements visible through the glass. Hopefully, according to Steward, being able to see such dynamic work without barriers - save for the glass walls - will lure passerby inside. "There's this idea: We want to make art part of the everyday experience," he said. The space is part of UMMA's efforts to make the museum - and by extension, art in general - more accessible to everyone, every day, in its position as both a University resource and a com- munity resource. According to Steward, UMMA is the largest museum between Detroit and Chicago and people come from great distances to visit. Each visitor, whatever his or her walk of life, should feel comfortable taking in a performance-at UMMA's See UMMA, Page 4B IN CONCERT Celebrated in both his native country and the world over, pianist Rado- slav Kvapil is regularly crowned the greatest Czech pianist in the world. In his Friday night recital, he'll perform works by legendary fel- low-Czechs Leos Janacek and Antonin Leopold Dvorak. 8 p.m. at the E.V. Moore Building. Free.