+ THE NEWS ROUNDUP >> YOU NEED TO KNOW KELCIE MATOUSEK/KANSAN DURING THE ROSH HASHANAH HOLIDAY,students celebrating away from their families are welcomed to attend events around campus. News >> PAGE 2 LAWRENCE AUTHOR ANDREW MILWARD said his book of stories is a "love letter" to his home state's complex history. Arts & Culture > PAGE 5 CONTRIBUTED PHOTO FOR MICHAEL ANDREW, a 16-year old pro swimmer the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio is the next goal on his list. Sports >> PAGE 10 KANSAN.COM FOLLOW NEWS ONLINE KU VS. MEMPHIS GALLERY Check out photos from Kansas football's 55-23 loss to the Memphis Tigers on Saturday. MISSY MINEAR/KANSAN >> Kansan.com/ Sports ANSAN ALEX ROBINSON/KANSAN HASKELL INDIAN ART MARKET More than 150 artists from around the country spent the weekend at the 27th annual event. Kansan.com ENGAGE WITH US > ANYWHERE. @KANSANNEWS /THEKANSAN KANSAN.NEWS @UNIVERSITY DAILYKANSAN THE UNIVERSITY MONDAY, SEPT. 14, 201 NEWS ROUNDUP >> YOU NEED TO KNOW KELCIE MATOUSEK/KANSAN DURING THE ROSH HASHANAH HOLIDAY,students celebrating away from their families are welcomed to attend events around campus. News>> PAGE 2 LAWRENCE AUTHOR ANDREW MILWARD said his book of stories is a "love letter" to his home state's complex history. Arts & Culture PAGE 5 CONTRIBUTED PHOTO FOR MICHAEL ANDREW, a 16-year-old pro swimmer, the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio is the next goal on his list. Sports >> PAGE 10 KANSAN.COM >> FOLLOW NEWS ONLINE MISSY MINEAR/KANSAN KU VS. MEMPHIS GALLERY Check out photos from Kansas football's 55-23 loss to the Memphis Tigers on Saturday. KU VS. MEMPHIS GALLERY Check >> Kansan.com/ Sports Elizabeth VanSant, a sophomore from St. Louis, Mo., has he VanSant, a sophomore from St. Louis, has hemophilia, a blood disorder that prevents her blood from clotting properly. What it's like to LARA KORTE @lara_korte +8 When Elizabeth VanSant first came to the University, she knew there would be a lot of changes to make. After graduating from a class of only 44 students, VanSant found herself surrounded by more than 27,000 people on a campus littered with hills and stairs. A common issue with hemophiliacs is severe internal bleeding, particularly at the joints. Last year, VanSant developed an internal bleed in her left hip from the stress placed on it by excessive uphill walking, causing her to miss cramp on the way to class. For VanSant, it means an internal bleed. For most people, climbing the steep inclines means being a little out of breath or, at most, dealing with an ill-timed ALEX ROBINSON/KANSAN a sophomore, Van- her muscles are and have adjuste- count of walking she heat her hemophilia, infuses herself evi- vies with the factor 9 or blood is missing clot. The process is more than 15 mini- ophilia at KU ugh, it's pretty dif- r blood from clotting properly. my body and I can 'm getting a bleed.' id. That's when it's time to infuse, she said. "It used to be difficult, but I think I've gotten the hang of it," VanSant said. Because the infusions require an intravenous line, treatment can sometimes be tricky. Van-Sant does the infusions herself, sometimes having to stick herself with a needle two or three times to find a vein. Her mother, Becky VanSant, said if Elizabeth doesn't get her infusions often enough, the results can be ugly. JAMES HOYT/KANSAN A pass sails over the heads of Memphis receiver Anthony Miller and Kansas cornerback Brandon Stewart. English profess of immigration SEE HEMOPHILIA PAGE 2 We deliver from 10.30am-10.00pm every day! Dig in! Voted Best of Lawrence 2015! 1 coupon per delivery. Not valid with other offers. s foot and hooked get back to his quar- ks flounder not training is only one problem: cornerback Brandon was caught in the it, and didn't veer check on the quarre pass fell incom- Stewart was called g. Memphis moved distance to the goal d two plays later to to 24-13 with 32 t in the half. d him, and we were r a fade, then I saw it off and he came back and curled on me." Stewart said. "They called holding cause I had my back hand around him. That's on me. I've got to play with better technique; play with my feet, not with my hands. "We're always coached to turn our head around, so we won't get those calls." The struggles of the cornerbacks — not just Stewart, but Tyrone Miller, Ronnie Davis and Tevin Shaw — was as clear as could be. They were left guessing on play fakes from SEE CORNERS PAGE 11 s relevancy lection near tnam War, he spent am working with Adge Stephen Morrison on New 1ife, a provided the more than /jetnamese refugees up in Guam after the n. d the refugee crisis in taking the film series elephant. An estimated have fled since the man in 2011, according Nations High Comar Refugees. untrries are more willrefugees than others," "Countries like Deneiden that used to take gees are now becomat this is a universal r Western Europe or States. rld problem, and the at large should be aat's happening." he thinks much of the victim to empathy the face of intern- nigation issues. He series will humanize faceless" immigrants 1. he said. 4 "I think these are good films to begin with, and they're worth seeing because they're good movies," he said. "Secondly, we are shown personal stories, private lives, the struggles of people—after all, we are a nation of immigrants, and many of us have our own individual stories we can tell. "But when you read about these tremendous numbers of people, right now, for instance, in Europe we have these incredible numbers of people who are migrating to Hungary and Austria and Germany, all you get are these incredible numbers, you don't really know individual stories" "I'm not aware that were doing a lot at KU to inform students of the imminent problem," Moos said. "Paul Lim should be lauded." The first film will be shown this Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Lawrence Art Center. The following films will be shown at the same time Sept. 22 and 29. Edited by Scott Chasen