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From Texas Penitentiary to NABJ's Student of YearToday, Hefner is a 34-year-old director of strategic promotions at DallasWeekly.com in Texas, the Web site of the African American weekly. His story of soul-searching and personal improvement so impressed directors of the National Association of Black Journalists that they named him 2005 Student Journalist of the Year.
Hefner left prison with a drive to overcome the rigid obstacles often created by checking �yes� in the box on most job applications that asks whether applicants have criminal records. �I made myself a promise that when I got out, that I was going to do everything I had to do to make a success out of myself,� Hefner said. �I didn�t have time to waste. I had to come out, and straight up, just get on it.� He had earned an associate of arts degree in 2001 from Western Texas College while in prison but after he was released, he was denied admission to Dallas Baptist University because of his criminal record, he said. But he was nudged into Paul Quinn College by Cheryl Smith, who was teaching in the communications department at the historically black college in Dallas. Smith, who was then on the NABJ board of directors, encouraged him when he visited her office in 2002. In Atlanta at the annual NABJ convention, he passed out leaflets in the Hyatt hotel in support of Smith�s candidacy for NABJ president.
However, his life was not always swelling with triumphs. Hefner explained his parents were not very strict and allowed him to explore his rough, south Dallas surroundings, which were infested with drug dealers, pimps and con artists. Soon, Hefner embraced the fast life. According to Hefner, hustling was always natural to him. �I came up with [an] understanding that there is a time that you gotta do what you gotta do,� Hefner said. �It was always a second nature to hustle or try to do something for that extra money.� When Hefner wasn�t looking for the fast dollar, he was flinging jabs at his classmates, who constantly teased him for having a mixed racial background � American Indian, French and German on his mother�s side and was black on his father�s. Though his parents never graduated from high school, Hefner dreamed of attending college and received scholarship offers to play basketball at schools such as Kansas State and East Oklahoma University. But almost as soon as he received those offers, his lost his freedom. �With selling drugs, using drugs, my life kinda just tumbled,� Hefner said. He landed behind bars on aggravated robbery and drug charges. There, he said, he devoted much of his attention to prison ministries aimed at helping gang members, and he made a personal vow to improve his own tumultuous life.
When asked about Hefner, Smith smiled. In her experience, she said, there are very few people like the man she helped get into college three years ago. One of the biggest lessons he has learned over the years, he said, is that �you need people.� Hefner stressed that students must take advantage of the networking and internship opportunities that NABJ offers. Posted Aug. 5, 2005 |
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