Save the 76 Ball - highway 111 http://www.savethe76ball.com/taxonomy/term/292/0 en Palm Desert Station Owner Happy He Gets to Keep His Ball http://www.savethe76ball.com/palmdesert <p><span class="vitstorybody"><font size="+2"><strong><br /> <h2 class="vitstoryheadline"><span class="vitstoryheadline">Riverside Press-Enterprise <a href="http://www.pe.com/columns/bobpratte/stories/PE_News_Local_D_dbob25.3de9e93.html" target="_blank">feature</a>: Keep 76 ball rolling</span></h2> <p></strong></font> <font size="-1"><strong><br /> <h5 class="vitstorydate"><span class="vitstorydate">Tuesday, July 24, 2007</span></h5> <p></strong></font> <font size="-1"><strong><span class="vitstorybyline">BOB PRATTE</span></strong></font> <span class="vitstorybody"> <p>D<strong>avid Hamm</strong>, the affable owner of the Palm Desert 76 gas station on Highway 111, heard good news last week.</p> <p>His station will be a rare location with one of those 76 balls that became endangered when the chain&#39;s owner, ConocoPhillips, began taking them away. I am not aware of another station in the Coachella Valley or San Gorgonio Pass with a 76 ball. Hamm, instead of lamenting its loss, now can cheer.</p> <p>&quot;We thought we were going to have to get rid of it,&quot; said the station&#39;s manager, <strong>Dennis Finnell</strong>.</p> <p>Hamm was saddened by the planned loss of the ball but did not fight its proposed removal. Finnell said Hamm was glad to hear a ball will be on his property.</p> <p>The orange 76 ball, which debuted at the 1962 Seattle World&#39;s Fair, was a familiar symbol to Southern California drivers since the 1960s.</p> <p>Hamm&#39;s station was doomed to lose the ball in a few months during the installation of new signs and the painting of a red-and-white ConocoPhillips color scheme, which retains the old 76 logo, but in red.</p> <p>The 76 stations on Beaumont Avenue near Interstate 10 in Beaumont and Hargrave Street off the freeway in Banning both received the red-and-white treatment but do not have balls. The Smoke Tree 76 in Palm Springs lacks a ball too.</p> <p>ConocoPhillips, which acquired the 76 stations in 2002, began taking the old balls down a year later. Upset people started opposition Web sites and circulated petitions to try to save the balls.</p> <p>ConocoPhillips marketing specialists, concerned about the backlash, relented and announced they would have balls at 100 high-profile stations. The Palm Desert station was chosen, but the ball won&#39;t be the nostalgic orange globe that now is in place. ConocoPhillips is replacing the orange balls with a new, red version displaying the 76 logo.</p> <p>People love the old orange ball. In the gas biz, there is little affection for high prices and a lack of service. Why not keep something that is liked?</p> <p>The choice of Hamm&#39;s service station is particularly appropriate. He actually provides service. He only charges a few cents extra for full-service gas pumping, customers know attendants by name and mechanics work on cars. It&#39;s an old-school place where the orange ball would be a symbol of small-business values from another era.</p> <p><strong>Monty Sabbah</strong>, owner of the 76 station on Monroe Street in Indio, was not so lucky. He lost his 76 ball during his station&#39;s repainting last spring. He wasn&#39;t even allowed to truck the old orange ball home. &quot;They took it away,&quot; he said.</p> <p>His customers were saddened by its removal. They told him it was a symbol that endured from their youth.</p> <p>Sabbah said he only sees a few remaining 76 balls in Los Angeles and is not aware of any in the desert or Pass, besides the Palm Desert station.</p> <p>&quot;I like the old 76 ball,&quot; he said. &quot;You remember it from years ago.</p> <p>&quot;It was sad. The 76 station in Smoke Tree Village in Palm Springs lacks a 76 ball too. We still have pictures and the memories.&quot;</p> <p>Sabbah also has a small supply of those old 76 orange antenna balls. He&#39;s not a stingy man. In the tradition of the orange ball, he&#39;s willing to give them away to the first customers who ask.</p> <p><em>Reach Bob Pratte at 951-763-3452 or <a href="mailto:bpratte@PE.com">bpratte@PE.com</a></em></p> <p></span></span></p> http://www.savethe76ball.com/palmdesert#comment california highway 111 palm desert Thu, 26 Jul 2007 14:30:25 -0700 kim 138 at http://www.savethe76ball.com