The University Daily Kansan LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS, INC. DOMESTIC & FOREIGN COMPLETE CAR CARE 842-8665 Section B • Page 6 Big Sale Now! After Midnight at Rocky's NOW OPEN! OPEN LATE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT! Fresh Subs, Salads, Shakes, Beer You've Never Eaten Like This Before! Buy ANY Large Buy ANY Large Sandwich,Get FREE Homemade Onion Rings Or Fries! Hours Mon. - Thurs. 11am - 10 pm Fri. & Sat. 11 am - 3 am Sun. Noon - Close 714 Vermont • 841-7775 fax 785-841-1771 *Expires 9/30/00* Buenos Aires Lima Tokyo Santiago London Dublin Paris Nice Copenhagen Stockholm Oslo Amsterdam Berlin Munich Zurich İstanbul Low Student Airfares Eurailpasses More Than 100 Departure Cities Study Abroad studentuniverse.com 800.272.9676 Helen, Sweetheart of the Internet Museum displays exiled artists' work in WWII exhibit The pained expressions and resistant shapes and images are found in some of the works displayed in "Artists in Exile," an exhibit that opened Sept. 2 and will run through Sunday, Oct. 1; at the Spencer Museum of Art. By Anne Robertson Special to the Kansan Hard, haggard lines frame the eyes that stare back at you; angular shapes jut out at tortured angles. "They were 'degenerate' artists, and their works were banned from public view, removed from museum collections, and in some cases destroyed." Sherman said. "The theme is that all artists were modernists. There weren't any landscapes, and Hitler only espoused landscapes and traditional portraiture and sculpture." The prints and drawings were done by artists who were persecuted by the Nazi regime for their work, which was not necessarily meant to be political. Artists such as Pablo Picasso and George Grosz were barred from exhibiting their work in German museums. A free, public lecture series, "The Holocaust: Who knew What? When? Where?" by Professor Michael Marrus of the University of Toronto, will be at 8 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 20, in the Spencer auditorium. Edited by Kinchuk Thomas The series is presented along with the International Conference on Exile Studies, which runs Thursday, Sept. 21, to Sunday, Sept. 24, at the Max Kade Center for German-American Studies. Many of the pieces protest fascism and the inhumanities of war but do not represent a reaction to oppression. They represent survival and recovery. "We chose to do an exhibition with artists who left Germany or Europe as a result of Nazism," said Andrea Norris, director of the museum. "But they were not works of art that were all done in direct response to Nazism." "It was a request from the German department, and they asked if we could get together a visual display to go along with the topic of the symposium, which deals with exiles of World War II," said Cori Sherman, curatorial assistant for the print department, who organized the show. Some of the art movements, such as Die Brucke and Der Blae Reiter, were intended as artistic statements that pushed artistic boundaries of the time. Because Hitler censored this form of expression, it became not only an artistic statement, but a political one as well, she said. - Edited by Kimberly Thompson Crossword ACROSS 1 "The House Rules" 2 Killer whale 3 Soft drink 4 Way to bring 'em back 5 Sauce and spirited 6 Actor Bates 7 Sieved into pellets 8 Send forth 9 lost traction 10 Brewer's tub 11 Facial film 12 Corrected, as manuscript 13 Toledo mister 14 Property holder 15 Moving masses of people 16 Brief skirt 17 Bigotry 18 Geisha's sash 19 Guam port 19 Apple computer 21 Fancy crab 22 Rocky crag 23 Valve attacherm 24 Painter Holbein 25 Assignments 26 12-step program 27 Panorama 28 Lose weight 29 Not needed 30 Fall behind 31 Rad! 32 Bradbury and Charles 33 Tragedy 34 Oaf 35 Difficult journey 37 Broadcast 37 Boleyn or Brocott 37 Mach+ jets 37 Spinning toys DOWN 1 Slice the turkey 2 Homeric opus 3 Basic reference book 4 Night before 5 Blush 6 Oil cartel 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | | | | | | 15 | | | | 16 | | | | 17 | | | | | 18 | | | | 19 | | | 20 | | | | 21 22 | | | | 23 | | | | 24 | | | 25 | | | 26 | | | | | | | | 27 | | | | 28 | | 29 | | | | | 33 34 | | | | 36 | 36 37 | | | | 38 | | | 39 | | | 40 | 41 | | | 42 43 | | | | 44 | | | 45 46 | | | 47 | 48 | | | 49 | | 50 | | | 51 | 52 | | | | | | | 53 | | | 54 55 | 56 | | | | 57 58 | 59 60 61 | | | | 54 55 | 56 | | | 63 | | 64 | | | | 65 | | 62 | | | 68 | | | | 69 | | 70 | | | 71 | | | | 72 | | 73 | | | | $ \textcircled{c} $ 2000 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. S/14/00 7 Story-telling 8 What doesn't pay? 9 Go toes 10 Cuban leader 11 podida 12 Hideaway 13 Gibb or Garcia 14 Baltic Sea feeder 15 Address Shearer 16 Caoror or Pollux 18 Interstate entrance 30 Stock of words 31 Poetical black 32 Tends the children 33 Dillon or Damon 34 Borodin opera, *Prince* 38 Ballplayer's hat 39 Cake finisher 40 Top room 43 Roe producer 44 Maintains 47 Guam or Yukon: Solution's to Wednesday's Crossword abbr. 50 Gracefully slender 52 Prime 54 Russian rulers 55 So far 57 Walk-on part 58 Eupheristic oath 59 USC rival 60 12.00 61 Person, place or thing 62 Questions 67 "___ Bravo" YOU'RE FOCUSED. YOU'RE DETERMINED. Find everything you need to know about grad school at www.petersons.com/campus AND YOU HAVE NO IDEA WHAT YOU'RE DOING. Gathering information for grad school can be absolutely mind-boggling. At Peterson's.com, youll find detailed information on programs, student loan information, online practice tests and online applications. 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