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Conferences >
Conference 2006 > Conference winners
Dallas writer wins book contract for Holocaust
manuscript;
three others win cash prizes at UNT Mayborn writers conference

DENTON (UNT), Texas ¾ Dallas freelance
writer Craig Hanley won a provisional publishing contract with the University
of North Texas Press for his book manuscript — a true-life love
story of a young married couple who survived the horrors of the Holocaust.
The award was announced at the 2nd annual Mayborn Literary Nonfiction
Writers Conference of the Southwest, presented by the UNT Mayborn Graduate
Institute of Journalism, and held July 14-16 at the Hilton DFW Lakes
Executive Conference Center in Grapevine. Three other writers won cash
prizes ranging from $1,000 to $3,000 for their articles and essays.
The book will be co-published by UNT Press and the Mayborn Institute.
Hanley’s manuscript chronicles the lives of William and Rosalie
Schiff as they marry in the Krakow ghetto before being separated and
sent through six Nazi camps. He began working on the book, titled “William
& Rosalie,” about a year ago after being hired by the Schiffs’
son, Michael, to write about his parents’ experiences in the Holocaust.

“For me, the story really gets going today,” Hanley said.
“The Schiffs – William and Rosalie are 86 and 83 —
have personally educated more than 25,000 students and teachers in North
Texas on the dangers of prejudice and mass hate.”
The Schiffs, now Dallas residents, continue to speak to groups visiting
the Dallas Holocaust Museum. They are working with their son and other
members of the community to build a new museum, the Center for Education
and Tolerance, in downtown Dallas, Hanley said.
In addition to the manuscript prize, cash prizes were awarded to:
- George Newtown, an English professor at Centenary
College of Louisiana and a resident of Benton, La., who won the 1st
place Dallas Morning News Award and $3,000 for a piece titled “Voir
Dire;”
- Michael J. Mooney, a UNT Mayborn Scholar and a
Bedford resident, who earned the 2nd place Hearst Corporation Award
and $2,000 for a piece titled “Sweet Dreams and Hand Sanitizer;”
- Dorie Bargmann, an Austin resident, who received
the 3rd place Ricco Family Partners Award and $1,000 for a piece titled
“After the Ceasefire.”
The top 20 manuscript writers and the top 50 article
and essay writers participated in conference workshops, in which professional
writers and editors critiqued their work. Out of those, the top 10 entries
will be published in “Spurs of Inspiration: A Literary Journal
Published by Hearst Newspapers and The Mayborn Institute.”
Articles
and essay entries were judged by: George Getschow, writer-in-residence
of the Mayborn Conference; Bill Marvel, writer for The Dallas Morning
News; Dianne Solis, writer for The Dallas Morning News; Beatriz
Terrazas, writer for The Dallas Morning News; S.C. Gwynee,
executive editor of Texas Monthly; Skip Hollandsworth,
executive editor of Texas Monthly; Michael Merschel,
Sunday Life editor for The Dallas Morning News;
and Thomas Huang, features editor for The Dallas Morning News.
Manuscript entries were judged by: Kurt Eichenwald, writer for The
New York Times; Gregg Jones, writer for The Dallas Morning
News; Bryan Woolley, writer for The Dallas Morning News; Ron
Chrisman, director of UNT Press; Jim Donovan, president of Jim Donovan
Literary; James D. Hornfischer, president of Hornfischer Literary Management,
L.P.; and Deanne Stillman, author of Twentynine Palms.
Literary journal selections were judged by: Kenn Altine, director of
editorial professional development for Hearst Newspapers and Robert
Rivard, executive vice president and editor of the San Antonio Express-News.
The Frank W. Mayborn Graduate Institute of Journalism at UNT was founded
in 1999 through a gift from the Frank W. and Sue Mayborn Foundation
Advise and Consult Fund at Communities Foundation of Texas, Inc. Through
this gift, the Mayborn Institute is able to offer $200,000 in scholarships
every year. The institute is named for longtime newspaper publisher
and civic leader Frank W. Mayborn, who owned the Temple Daily Telegram,
Killeen Daily Herald and KCEN-TV, Temple's NBC affiliate, before his
death in 1987.
For more information, contact the Mayborn Institute at (940) 565-4564.
**UNT**
The University of North Texas is a student-centered
public research university and is the flagship of the UNT System. It
is the most comprehensive university in the Dallas-Fort Worth region,
offering 93 bachelor's, 111 master's and 50 doctoral degree programs,
many nationally recognized. UNT is also one of the largest universities
in Texas, enrolling more than 32,000 students.
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