Hello, Basia,
These questions, like most LSAT questions, are much easier if you can break down and rephrase the sentences to be more clear.
In this case, let's take the first half of the first sentence.
"None of the students taking literature are taking physics..."
This can be rephrased into a conditional reasoning if-then statement.
"IF a student is taking literature, THEN that student is not taking physics."
The second part:
"...but several of the students taking physics are taking art."
This isn't conditional reasoning, but it stands for this statement:
"NOT NONE of the students are taking both art and physics."
Not none means some, but it can be easier to interpret things in terms of All/Not All, None/Not None, if you have trouble with some and several and those. Last part:
"None of the students taking rhetoric are taking physics."
If/then again:
"IF a student is taking rhetoric, THEN that student is not taking physics."
Summed up:
IF a student is taking literature, THEN that student is not taking physics.
IF a student is taking rhetoric, THEN that student is not taking physics.
NOT NONE of the students are taking both art and physics.
So this shows us that answer choice A must be true. It must be true that some students are taking both art and physics, and it also must be true that a student taking literature is not taking physics. So there must be at least some students that are taking art but
not literature.
Hope that helps,
Lucas Moreau