Modeling students
Gay Wassall-Kelly
It’s the late 1960s, the “undisciplined age.” Parents were sparing
the rod, “good grief” miniskirts were the fad and Charles Manson was
facing the death penalty. Some felt it was time to get the kids out
of “this substandard life” and prepare them for a better world.
What could be more perfect for your child than Copre College
Preparatory School, situated on the ocean front on the spectacular
Balboa Peninsula in Newport Beach? Here stands this elaborate 1930s
California Spanish Colonial revival building that was the former
Balboa Inn. The new school, a unique college prep environment for the
student with above-average potential, accepted girls and boys from
the sixth through the 12th grade.
Audry and Wayne Weber founded the school in 1968. Classes were
small, affording students individualized attention. Copre offered
physical education in a spacious gymnasium and a beach in front of
the school, science and language laboratories, a growing library and
home economics department.
“I remember when the school took over the two buildings in ‘68,”
said George Grupe who came to Newport Beach in 1923. “They built the
large swimming pool with sundeck that remains today. I stayed a few
nights at the Inn during WWII when I visited my family on Balboa
Island. I remember there were no bathrooms in the rooms so we had to
walk down the halls kind of like a dormitory. It was beautiful and I
bet the kids loved it as a school.”
There were many enrichment courses that few schools offered during
these times. The arts included intricate creative writing (student
magazines), watercolor and oil painting plus elaborate school drama
classes. “Boys only” created gourmet recipes (no hot dogs and
burgers) -- from layered cakes to exotic foreign dishes. For “girls
only,” there was “Modes and Manners” classes on appropriate grooming,
etiquette and modeling, plus ballet that would build poise and self
confidence.
Copre boasted of their faculty and administration as a dedicated
power that would provide an ideal structured situation to stimulate
maximum academic performance. They offered a five-week exchange
program in Switzerland with Copre’s European faculty members serving
as escorts. Foreign or out-of-state students could board in the
furnished rooms of the former inn.
The Copre goals were set for those families who sought for their
children high standards of ethical and moral conduct.
Balboa’s Copre had to be one of our best kept secrets. As I
researched with this question, “Do you know anything about Copre?” I
received dead silence followed by, “Never heard of the place -- a
school in the Balboa Inn?”
Copre, Balboa Inn was closed in the late ‘70s. A Copre Christian
School opened in Corona del Mar in 1978 (closed now) but were they
related? Let us hear form any former students of Copre College
Preparatory School in Balboa or Corona del Mar.
* LOOKING BACK runs Sundays. Do you know of a person, place or
event that deserves a historical look back? Let us know. Contact
James Meier by fax at (949) 646-4170; e-mail at
[email protected]; or mail at c/o Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
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