NORTHWEST East Oregonian A2 EOU Board of Trustees names interim co-presidents with the university’s alumni board and foundation board to understand the impact the decision may have on each organization. “After having listened to the discussion and reading public comments, we (decided we) need to take the time to find the next great leader of EOU,” trustee Cedric Riel said. “For the interim, I think we should go with people who are passionate about and committed to the university. I believe Lara and Richard are those people.” Martin also stressed the importance of new leadership working with the academic side of the university and engaging with deans and Seimears. Trustee and profes- sor Anna Cavinato strongly encouraged open communi- cation to seek feedback from the faculty. “I believe in EOU’s community,” Moore said. “We have gone through a number of leadership transi- tions in the past, and I have confidence that we will come out of this transition with a great leader for EOU. In the meantime, I’m ready for a fantastic year.” The board will meet in the next few weeks to deter- mine how to proceed with the search process. The Observer LA GRANDE — Richard Chaves and Lara Moore will take over as interim co-pres- idents of Eastern Oregon University on Sept. 1, the university announced in a release Friday, Aug. 19. The Eastern Oregon University Board of Trustees made the decision after conven- ing for a special session on Aug. 19. The move was made necessary by the announce- ment earlier this month that current president, Tom Insko, would be leaving his post at the end of September. Insko has been named president and chief executive officer at Collins, a wood products company based in Wilsonville. “We don’t make this choice lightly,” said Cheryl Martin, vice chair of the board of trust- ees. “We want to provide the university, and most import- ant, our students, with stabil- ity, continuity and momentum as they come into the new year.” After discussing the options for interim presi- dent, the board voted to adopt resolution 22-07 appointing Moore, the vice president for finance and administration, and Chaves, the current board chair, as interim co-presi- dents. Chaves will resign Moore Insko from the board to assume his new duties. The resolution also encourages the exten- sion of interim provost Matt Seimears’ appointment until June 30, 2024. The board began discus- sions of interim leadership at its retreat earlier this month. During its special session, the board held a lengthy review about its options for appointing interim leadership following President Insko’s resignation in early August. The board discussed the options of appointing co-pres- idents, naming an external interim president who has experience working with the university, elevating an inter- nal individual or conducting a search for an interim appoint- ment. Over the past two weeks, the board engaged with EOU’s shared governance bodies to gain feedback from faculty, students and staff to inform its decision. They also reached out to employee labor groups and connected Forecast for Pendleton Area | Go to AccuWeather.com TODAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY Plenty of sun Hot with plenty of sun Hot with abundant sunshine Mostly sunny, breezy and hot Not as hot; breezy in the a.m. 92° 62° 95° 63° PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 95° 67° 83° 54° 93° 61° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 95° 61° 98° 62° 97° 67° 87° 55° 95° 64° OREGON FORECAST ALMANAC Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. PENDLETON through 3 p.m. Mon. HIGH LOW TEMP. Seattle Olympia 74/60 87/56 93/63 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 92/66 Lewiston 81/61 96/64 Astoria 72/59 Pullman Yakima 94/70 83/57 94/67 Portland Hermiston 85/64 The Dalles 95/61 Salem Corvallis 86/57 Monday Normals Records La Grande 89/56 PRECIPITATION John Day Eugene Bend 89/58 87/56 91/56 Ontario 99/66 Caldwell Burns 97° 65° 89° 55° 103° (1946) 41° (1960) 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date Albany 85/57 0.02" 0.04" 0.12" 7.52" 2.46" 5.26" WINDS (in mph) 96/61 92/53 Trace 0.04" 0.22" 11.17" 4.35" 8.53" through 3 p.m. Mon. HIGH LOW TEMP. Pendleton 85/52 86/60 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date HERMISTON Enterprise 92/62 94/66 93° 63° 87° 57° 103° (1897) 37° (1904) PRECIPITATION Moses Lake 81/59 Aberdeen 89/65 92/69 Tacoma Monday Normals Records Spokane Wenatchee 81/63 Today Boardman Pendleton Medford 92/62 Wed. WSW 4-8 WNW 7-14 NNE 4-8 NNW 6-12 SUN AND MOON Klamath Falls 89/50 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2022 Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today 6:05 a.m. 7:50 p.m. 1:56 a.m. 6:32 p.m. New First Full Last Aug 27 Sep 3 Sep 10 Sep 17 NATIONAL EXTREMES Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 109° in China Lake, Calif. Low 34° in Bodie State Park, Calif. NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY Tuesday, August 23, 2022 Movable Museum Military vehicles plan to make a stop in Baker City Dan McCluskey/Contributed Photo A convoy of military vehicles takes a break on Friday, Aug. 19, 2022, while en route to a visit in Baker City on Aug. 24. Dan McCluskey/Contributed Photo Military vehicles along Highway 410 in Washington on Aug. 16, 2022. The convoy is sched- uled to visit Baker City on Wednesday, Aug. 24. By CLAYTON FRANKE Baker City Herald BAKER CITY — Dan McCluskey is heading for Baker City in his three-quar- ter ton Vietnam-era M37 cargo truck. But his rig — along with the 32 other military vehicles he’s traveling with — won’t be delivering any cargo. I nstead, McCluskey describes the convoy as a moving museum. “Our goal is to show everybody how the military used their vehicles,” McClus- key said. “They see military vehicles in museums on static display, but we’re out there to show them how they used them in motion.” “We’re putting hundreds of miles on them, day in, day out. This is how they moved them in convoy order.” McCluskey, a member of the Military Vehicle Preservation Association, is the convoy commander for the 2022 MVPA North- west Parks Motor Convoy, which is scheduled to arrive in Baker City on Wednes- day afternoon, Aug. 24, and spend the night at the Baker County Fairgrounds north of Campbell Street between Grove and East streets. McCluskey said the convoy is “fully on track for all of the scheduled stops.” After spending the night of Aug. 23 at the Grant County Fairgrounds in John Day, the convoy stops in Sumpter for lunch on Aug. 24 and arrive in Baker City via Highway 7. He guessed the line of vehicles would roll north on Main Street through downtown Baker City at around 3 to 4 o’clock that afternoon. Then, the convoy will arrange in close order at the fairgrounds. “We encourage the public to come out and visit,” McCluskey said. “We’ll be camping right there on the fairgrounds, so we’re gonna have about 33 military vehicles there for them to walk around, talk to our people, look at the vehicles.” Dan McCluskey/Contributed Photo A group of military vehicles is slated to visit Baker City on Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022. All the vehicles are privately owned by the people participating in the convoy, who are all MVPA members. Founded in 1976, MVPA is a nonprofit with more than 100 affiliates worldwide “dedicated to providing an international organization for military vehicle enthu- siasts, historians, preser- vationists and collectors interested in the acquisition, restoration, preservation, safe operation and public education of historic military transport,” according to its mission. McCluskey estimated that about 30%, and maybe more, of the participants in this year’s convoy are mili- tary veterans. When the convoy reaches Baker City it will be on day 11 of a 15-day, 1,600-mile historical loop taking the convoy through Idaho, Wash- ington and Oregon. Parts of the loop overlap with a longer, 6,350-mile highway the National Parks Service established in 1924 — the National Park-to-Park Highway — that encom- passes all the national parks in the 11 western states. The convoy’s schedule includes visits to the Lewis and Clark Trail, Mount Rain- ier National Park, Mount St. Helens, Mount Hood, Washington’s Pacific Coast, Oregon Trail sites, Hells Canyon and other signifi- cant military sites after leav- ing Kamiah, Idaho, the start point, on Aug. 14. Occasionally, McClusky said, members from MVPA affiliations along the route join in for segments of the journey. MVPA has affiliate clubs in Woodland, Washing- ton, and in Wilsonville. McClusky said the vehi- cles — from World War II, Korea, Vietnam, Desert Storm and current eras — can’t travel faster than 35 mph. “That’s our max speed,” he said. “A lot of times it’s a lot less because we are going up over hills. These old mili- tary vehicles are definitely not doing 60 miles per hour going over the grades.” Three units make up the convoy during travel: the “heavies,” 1.5- through 5-ton vehicles, lead the charge, followed by ¾-ton Dodge cargo trucks, followed by the jeep unit. McCluskey said they travel anywhere from 85 to 170 miles per day. This 1,600-mile trip isn’t the longest McClusky and the MVPA have completed. They traveled the Lincoln military highway, which spans from Washington, D.C., to San Francisco, in 2009, and completed the Bankhead Route from D.C. to Seattle in 2015. They also drove from Seattle to Plym- outh Rock last year. McCluskey said people usually show their support when they see the convoy. “Along the way, we’ll have people out at the end of their driveways, waving flags, waiting for the convoy to go by,” he said. The convoy will leave the Baker County Fairgrounds at 7 a.m. on the morning of Aug. 25 and stop in Oxbow, at the Oregon/Idaho border, for lunch. It will then head north for an afternoon display in Joseph and spend the night at the Eagle Cap Shooters Asso- ciation in Enterprise. Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. 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