Saturday, December 29, 2001
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal
Las Vegas artist creates poster to honor rescue
workers
Randy Soard waiting for permission
to print his creation
By JOELLE BABULA
REVIEW-JOURNAL

They are the faces of
hundreds of heroes, of all ages and colors.
Staring straight
ahead, the tiny images are superimposed over the already-renowned
photograph of firefighters raising the U.S. flag at Ground Zero.
Las Vegas artist
Randy Soard turned the pictures into a poster as a tribute to the
rescue workers who died in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
And he believes it
can raise millions of dollars for their families -- if he gets
permission to print it.
Families of the dead
rescue workers must grant Soard permission to use the photos.
Copyright licensure must be granted from The Record newspaper of
Bergen County, N.J., before the firefighter photo can be used.
"Art is my passion,
and I've been creating art to raise money for charities the last two
years," said Soard, a mechanical engineer by training. He has donated
paintings and photo mosaics to local charities such as Opportunity
Village in the past.
Soard said he is
working with lawyers and police and firefighter unions and
associations in New York City to secure the necessary permission
before the poster, called "Faces of the Brave," can be sold.
"I haven't contacted
the families myself. I'm trying to do that through the unions and
personnel departments of the New York City police," he said. "I can
remove pictures if families don't want to be a part of the poster, or
I could substitute a different photo if they like."
Although Soard hopes
to have the poster available next month, attorneys at The Record say
copyright licensure could take a long time, if it's granted at all.
"He's just one of
50,000 people who have contacted us for a license to use that
firefighter photo," said Jennifer Borg, general counsel for The
Record. "He's one man, and we have different priorities right now than
worrying about his poster. I do not know whether permission will be
granted for that poster."
The three
firefighters in the newspaper photo -- Dan McWilliams, George Johnson,
and Billy Eisengrein -- have seen a copy of Soard's poster and love
it, said their attorney, Bill Kelly of McCarthy & Kelly in Manhattan.
"They really do like
it, but it just hasn't gone through the entire approval process yet,"
Kelly said of the poster proposal. "We're dealing with thousands of
requests, but this one stood out. It's really good."
Soard said he tracked
down the photos of the victims on the Internet after getting a list of
the fallen rescue workers through media reports.
Soard
said profits from the poster will be gifted directly to the participating families or to the charity,
scholarship or memorial fund or charitable foundation of their choice.