SEASIDESIGNAL.COM • COMPLIMENTARY COPY OUR 111th YEAR • January 6, 2017 Seaside boys are top-ranked team in state WE’RE NUMBER ONE! Pearl plan gets a fresh start Revised proposal wins commission consensus for height variance By R.J. Marx Seaside Signal The hurdles that stalled a luxury hotel plan on the Prom appear to have been over- come as the Planning Commission granted a variance to allow the proposal to move ahead. Owner Antoine Simmons of Pearl Coast Lodgings LLC and architect David Vonada appeared Tuesday night with revised plans eliminating the most contentious parts of the Pearl of Seaside project that was struck down by the City Council on appeal last summer. Simmons, with his wife, Rocio, owns and operates four boutique hotels in Seaside and Cannon Beach, including Seaside’s Gilbert Inn and the Inn at the Prom. Plans for the Pearl called for three sto- ries, a penthouse fl oor and tower roof. A two-level parking garage on Beach Drive with 41 inside spaces would have been supplemented with an additional 10 outdoor spaces on Avenue A. But minimum stall lengths, back-out and lane widths required a variance from the Planning Commission. Simmons also See Pearl, Page 8A Rock for the arts Tillamook Head Gathering supports high-school arts programs By Katherine Lacaze DAMIAN MULINIX/FOR EO MEDIA GROUP Attikin Babb makes the move against a Newport defender in the Gulls 87-54 win. Babb is playing a bigger role for the Gulls, as Seaside continues to cruise past the competition. By Gary Henley EO Media Group T he Seaside boys basketball team had not played in seven days, had very little practice time, two players recovering from illnesses, and they were hosting a 5A team Dec. 28 at the Gulls’ Nest. And they still scored 93 points. For right now, there’s no stopping these Gulls, as the gap continues to widen between the state’s No. 1-ranked team and everybody else, as Seaside scored a 93-62 win over former Cowapa League foe St. Helens. Seaside scored over 20 points in every quarter, and left the Lions in the dust in the fi nal period, out- scoring St. Helens 23-6 in the fourth. “Our guard play wore (the Lions) down a little,” said Seaside coach Bill Westerholm, whose team improved to 8-0. The Gulls had fi ve players score in double fi gures, led by Jackson Januik’s 24 points. Payton Wester- holm added 19, Chase Januik had 18, followed by Hunter Thompson (15) and Duncan Thompson (12), who were both recovering from illnesses. For Seaside Signal Arts education programs are often the fi rst thing to be cut at local and state high schools facing a budget crunch. The Tilla- mook Head Gathering, a fundraiser to en- rich the arts at Seaside High School, seeks to reverse that trend with a program featur- ing local talent. “It’s important for kids to know there’s more to life than just if you can pass a test or not,” said Michelle Wunderlich, owner of Seaside Coffee House and one of the committee members behind the event. The third annual Tillamook Head Gath- ering will take place Saturday at the Sea- side Civic and Convention Center. Doors open at 6:30 and the program starts at 7 p.m. Through ticket sales and the silent art auction, the fi rst two years of the gathering each raised about $6,000 for arts enrich- ment at the high school. The money goes into a fund, and teachers or students who See Seagulls, Page 10A PAID PERMIT NO. 97 ASTORIA, OR PRSRT STD US POSTAGE See Gathering, Page 6A How salt saved the Lewis and Clark Expedition When saltmakers came to Seaside By Katherine Lacaze For Seaside Signal Salt was not only a critical part of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. “I’m going to say it saved them,” historian and retired National Park Service ranger Tom Wilson said. The Corps of Discovery’s harrowing expedition more than 200 years ago was the focus of Wilson’s presentation, “A Convenient Situation,” during the Seaside Museum and Historical Society’s History and Hops event Thursday at Seaside Brewery. The story would not be complete, according to Wilson, without the mention of salt-making in pres- ent day Seaside. “This expedition and these saltmakers did change the course of American history, and world history,” said Wilson , who draws most of his information from “The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition,” as printed by the University of Nebraska Press. Wilson, dressed in period garb, opened his pre- sentation by sharing different ways salt has contrib- uted to human history and survival. In ancient Greece, slaves were traded for salt, which gave rise to the phrase “worth one’s weight in salt.” The word “salary” also is derived from the Latin word “salarium,” which has the root “sal,” or salt, in reference to the allotment paid to Roman soldiers to purchase the commodity. Salt also played an import- ant role in both the Revolutionary and Civil wars. A bushel of salt Before the 1860s, Wilson said, salt wasn’t mined in the United States; rather, it was harvested from the ocean and natural salt deposits and salt licks. As the Corps of Discovery prepared for its west- ward journey, they gathered supplies, including three bushels — or about seven barrels — of salt, leaving Wood River, Illinois, with more than 64,000 pounds of supplies. For the expedition, Capt. Meriwether Lewis as- sembled “arguably the best team,” including what Wilson calls “The Fab Five”: Lewis, Second Lt. Wil- liam Clark, Clark’s slave York, Sacagawea and Lew- is’s dog Seaman. See Salt, Page 6A KATHERINE LACAZE/FOR SEASIDE SIGNAL A sample of unprocessed ocean salt, as would have been harvested by members of the Corps of Discovery during the Lewis and Clark Expedition about 200 years ago.