Countdown to 2000: Personalities
Alex Coolman
Law and order. For many Californians, the words conjure an image of
Ronald Reagan cracking down on Berkeley riots in the 1960s. But for
people who were around Newport Beach during that turbulent decade, the
words are associated with another man: James Glavas, Newport’s chief of
police.
Glavas was the man responsible for keeping the peace during Bal Week, the
springtime festival that had once been a source of pride for the
community but had become, by the mid-1960s, a loud, obnoxious festival of
hormones run amok. Bal Week was an annual source of gridlock and public
drunkenness, with up to 15% of those attending getting into trouble with
the police.
The chief promised to clean up Bal Week and he delivered on his
disciplinary promise. Glavas sent arrest counts soaring and eventually
went so far in 1964 as to attempt to block off all traffic to the
peninsula.
Ultimately, however, it was the burning of the Rendezvous Ballroom in
1966 that did the most to kill off Bal Week. The destruction of that
landmark, more than all of Glavas’ strict measures, took the wind out of
the event’s sails.
The tension of the Bal Week controversy was not only about a clash of
cultures; it also stemmed from the need to acknowledge that a sleepy
beachside community was growing with tremendous speed into a large city.
Costa Mesa grappled with the same issue, but it seemed to Bob Wilson,
who served as mayor from 1964 to 1966, that the growth was doing great
things for the town.
“The ‘60s was the real time for Costa Mesa,” Wilson said. “We built a
city hall. We built a twin golf course. We built South Coast Plaza. We
started automobile row.”
Wilson brought a forceful, business-friendly personality to local
politics. He credits developers like Don Koll, Dick Sewell and Wally
Gainer with keeping the economic gears turning, but when he thought a
special project needed his attention, he threw himself into it.
The widening of Harbor Boulevard was one such project.
“That was really a donnybrook,” he joked. “Everybody got mad at me.”
Sources: “Newport Beach, the First Century: 1888-1988,” James P.
Felton; Bob Wilson.
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