Countdown to 2000: Lifestyles
Greg Risling
In the immortal words of the movie world’s most swinging single, Austin
Powers, the 1960s were “groovy, baby.”
While most of the nation was coping with the prospects of another war,
the onslaught of “mind-expanding” drugs and new terminology such as “free
love,” Newport-Mesa was developing its own cultural character.
Business development was moving along rapidly while the cities attempted
to maintain their historical legacies. Both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach
added major shopping destinations -- South Coast Plaza in 1966 and
Fashion Island at year later.
Tourists were already unable to resist the attractive features of
Newport-Mesa. Its sprawling beaches, rolling terrain and coastal views
were like a slice of heaven.
Yet the area’s popularity became a headache for residents who put up with
tourists flooding the area.
One of Newport’s annual passages was Bal Week, which attracted thousands
of high school and college students to the area. Spurred by the
popularity of surfing, Newport Beach was clogged with traffic. And Surf
guitarist Dick Dale was a regular performer at the Rendezvous Ballroom.
Newly appointed police chief James Glavas was faced with handling the
commotion. In 1965, the police made more than 1,000 arrests during spring
break. Glavas said that was the first year his department made headway.
It was only a matter of time -- six years -- before Bal Week ceased to
exist.
Community leaders also wanted to preserve what it could of its short
history. One of the city’s oldest sites, the Estancia, was given to Costa
Mesa by the Segerstrom family in 1963. The five-acre site had an adobe
that was restored and dedicated as a historical monument three years
later.
As the decade closed, it was evident there would be further construction.
The Irvine Company held groundbreaking ceremonies for Newport Center, the
South Coast Town Center was built off Bristol Street, and Costa Mesa’s
first high-rise -- Bethel Towers, home to senior citizens -- was
completed in 1968.
Sources: “A Slice of Orange: The History of Costa Mesa,” by Edrick
Miller, 1970; “Newport Beach 75: 1906-1981,” by James Felton, 1981.
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