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"After 9/11, the cartoonists organized and did a series of message strips around Thanksgiving
weekend ... but it was also reflective and sympathetic to everyone who suffered," he said. "So 10 years later, a good number of those cartoonists already understood what the message needed to be," Burford said. "Some are taking the
'it's OK to laugh,' and others are taking the "it's OK to heal" path. And it being Sunday, that gives the 93 cartoonists ample space to write, draw and be read. Borgman and Scott said their strip will look at the anniversary through teenager Jeremy's eyes. "Jerry Scott and I tried to think about what Sept. 11, 2001, would mean to a person who is now 16 years old
-- put aside the fact that Jeremy has been 15 or 16 for 13 years now," he said. Tony Rubino, who writes "Daddy's Home," was living in Washington on Sept. 11 and has been involved with Jeremy's Heroes, a charity founded on behalf of Jeremy Glick, one of the passengers killed aboard Flight 93 in Shanksville, Pa. His strip for Sept. 11, which is drawn by Gary Markstein, drew inspiration from the passengers of Flight 93, whose actions helped bring the United Airlines flight down in a Pennsylvania field instead of its likely target, the White House or the U.S. Capitol. "I went by their example and rather than reflect on something that was negative in the past, I thought
'What is the future? What I've done, my particular strip for 9/11 this year, is a look forward rather than a look back," he said. Rubino said that the cartoonists' efforts are bound to be noticed, even among the din of anniversary coverage and programming. "The comics are different. I think it's a chance for people to see a perspective on this anniversary that they wouldn't see otherwise," he said. "They're going to get a million television programs, but this is a unique way of looking at it." ___ Online:
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