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August 26, 2007

THE LATEST ON SAVING THE "UNION 76 BALLS" AND ARROYO SECO PARKWAY BECOMES THE FIRST FREEWAY

Since the story below about the still-ongoing work performed by Kim Cooper to save the many of the original "Union 76 Balls" was posted several months ago, we are thrilled to announce that ConocoPhillips, the new owner of what we knew as Union Oil and then later as Unocal, perhaps the signature gasoline product and name of the Western United States from the 1930s and on, has agreed to replace some of the original '76 Balls' and make new ones somewhat true to their original styling intent (listen to my interview with the balls' actual designer below). These '76 Balls' included the one which proudly spun in the parking lot of Dodger Stadium since it opened in 1962 (in typically Southern California fashion, the beautiful and futuristic stadium was ready to open for the 1961 baseball season, but landslides and lawsuits delayed that for one year). For many Americans living in the Midwest and on the East Coast in the early '60s (like my parents and me, on Long Island, just outside NYC), that spinning bright orange ball with the giant '76' emblazoned upon it, easily visible in daylight and lit from inside at night, was as much a symbol of Los Angeles as the "Superman/Daily Pilot Newspaper Building" (which we all later figured out was LA's City Hall) and even the always-glorious New Year's Day TV broadcast (in color, no less!) of the Rose Bowl football game from Pasadena, which many of us enjoyed in deep snows while our parents looked at our small black-and-white TV screens and said, bravely, "What the hell are we doing here? That's where we're moving!" We also later learned that the football game was being played  just literally a short hop over a hill or two from that same Dodger Stadium parking lot. The route between Dodger Stadium and Pasadena was actually part of "the original" Route 66, and it could be negotiated on another new Southern California invention, the very first Freeway. Then known as the Arroyo Seco Parkway, it's a roadway which took drag racing from the nearby salt flats and race tracks where it had been developed and put it back on the city streets, because the stop signs at the end of all the on-ramps necessitated pedal-to-the-metal launches, even in 1940, when the Arroyo Seco Parkway opened. In 1999, that roadway was named a National Historic Civil Engineering Monument by the American Society of Civil Engineers. And that's no small stuff, either. Read on

Arroyosecoparkway1940 Only nine other California Public Works projects have been awarded the “landmark” designation. The 8.2-mile parkway (pictured here in 1940) received this special designation because it was the first fully grade-separated, limited-access, landscaped freeway to be built as a non-toll state highway within an urban area. Built at a cost of $5.7 million, it paved the way for over 4,000 miles of California freeways that came after it and it became the prototype for subsequent urban freeways in the United States. The parkway was constructed between January, 1938 and December, 1940, when it was opeend to great fanfare and media coverage nationwide.

The Arroyo Seco, a dry wash lying just west of Pasadena and curving south and west toward downtown Los Angeles, was considered an ideal location for a road as early as 1895. However, construction did not begin for another 45 years. Amazingly, a bicycle speedway that was constructed in the early 1900’s preceded the parkway as the first transportation artery in the Arroyo Seco (Dry Gulch) Channel. Elements of that bicycle parkway, which saw some of the early, wealthy denizens of Pasadena riding healthfully to and from their brand-new offices in nearby downtown LA, are still visible and even in use. But, we digress ...

SAVE THE "76" BALLS

76logo SAVE THE “76” BALLS!

Unocal’s New Owner is Taking Them All Down!

Hear the Car Nut Interview With The BALL’s creator here.

Sign The SAVE THE BALL Petition here!

Anyone who ever traveled the Great American West (or visited a race track where NASCAR ran events), knows well the large, round, orange balls twirling perpetually high above “Union 76” gas stations (later known as “Unocal”).

Well, Unocal’s new owner, ConocoPhillips, has begun removing ALL the BALLS, an advertising gimmick which has become nothing less than an icon of the American west of the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s, those years when millions migrated from east to west, and saw the great BALLS as heralding their arrival in the great new land. From the original Mother Road, Route 66, to the interstates which eventually replaced Bobby Troupe’s and Nat King Cole’s favorite road, the BALLS were shorthand for “The West”.76ballhead

Sadly, Sunoco (which has a strong east coast presence) has also replaced Unocal and 76 as the “Official Fuel” for NASCAR, so the BALLS are no longer displayed at race tracks nationwide.

The huge BALL in the parking lot of Dodger Stadium, revolving perpetually above a googie space-age Unocal gas station, served to alert uncounted millions worldwide who ever watched a Dodger game on TV anywhere in the world that this game was being played in Los Angeles, the Heart of the West. Even that BALL is gone!

Steve Parker, The Car Nut, recently interviewed the creator of the original BALL which was used as a promotional gimmick for the Union 76 Sky Ride at the Seattle World’s Fair some 40 years ago. Ray Pedersen’s stories of actually making the first BALL, flying it all over the West in his private plane and having it photographed at Western iconic symbols such as the Grand Canyon, is MUST listening for Fans of The BALL. It takes a bit of time to download, but it's absolutely worth it. Hear it by clicking here!

And SIGN THE PETITION to SAVE THE BALL here!

Ray Pedersen --- and his balls --- thank you!

And here's the address for the latest on the SAVE THE BALLS effort: http://feeds.feedburner.com/76ball ...

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