LOOKING BACK
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Young Chang
Joan Crum visited the Daily Pilot last week and asked, shyly, whether
we’d be interested in the picture she held in her hand.
It was a mustard-colored clipping of a photo that ran in our paper on
Dec. 2, 1971. It had darkened with time and perhaps even become fuzzier.
In the foreground was a side view of the Statue of Liberty. Behind that,
to the right, stood the World Trade Center towers.
Those of us from the newsroom who met Crum downstairs stared, at the
clippings in awe. It was strange, in a good but eerie way, to witness the
two buildings as they once stood. Stranger even still was the fact that
this photo had run in the Pilot a good three decades ago and had been
saved, for some reason, by a sweet little lady who wondered if we might
want it back.
This week’s history column will be the story of Crum and why she saved
a reprint of what has now become two of the tallest losses ever.
“I wanted to share it with other people,” the longtime Costa Mesan
said. “I didn’t want to just leave it here and stick it in a book or
something.”
Crum, a retired employee of Waterloo Galleries (they make miniatures),
was in the business of reconstructing little figurines in the early ‘70s.
Her boss at the time wanted Crum to redo the Statue of Liberty -- her job
was to cast the figure in lead and restructure it in wax. So the Pilot
reader clipped every photo of the Statue she could find, including the
one in our paper because it offered a side view of the famous lady.
“I needed to find out how the drapes fell,” Crum, 76, said.
Though the Pilot now covers only Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and UC
Irvine, we used to run stories and photos by the Associated Press and
United Press International to cover national and international events in
addition to local happenings.
Crum’s photo was a reprint of a UPI Telephoto. The Pilot had run it,
the caption tells us, because the towers were still two years away from
being completed at the time.
Reams of wire stories and pictures would spit through a spider-armed
apparatus called the Linotype machine that went “clackety clack” back in
the ‘70s and ‘80s, said the Pilot’s Sports Editor Roger Carlson, who
started working here in 1968.
The paper’s focus changed in 1991, concentrating coverage on
Newport-Mesa, Carlson added.
When asked why she saved the photo after using it, Crum answered
simply:
“I’m a collector.”
She’s the type who can’t just throw things away, who keeps everything
from her daughter’s baby toys to photographs from magazines and
newspapers to use in her artwork, which she still does as a hobby.
She stored the clipping in a Waterloo Galleries box and placed it in
the garage 30 years ago. Last week, Crum and her daughter were sorting
through old boxes when they came across the Pilot photo.
“And no other pictures showed the Trade Centers,” Crum said. “They
were mainly the heads of the Statue of Liberty.”
The collector suddenly giggled.
“And my daughter used to kid me about saving everything . . .” she
mused.
* Do you know of a person, place or event that deserves a historical
Look Back? Let us know. Contact Young Chang by fax at (949) 646-4170;
e-mail at [email protected]; or mail her at c/o Daily Pilot, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
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