FROM PAGE ONE A12 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 2021 Belles: Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Students meet with volunteers to discuss various facets of budgeting during the FAB Life simulation at Hermiston High School on Wednesday, May 19, 2021. FAB: Continued from Page A1 One student decided he was going to have his teenage daughter babysit to help cover rent. “I’m surprised at seeing some of them with higher income already coming to me,” Spencer said after a student making $77,643 said she was running out of money and still had more booths to visit. Kaylie Cook, whose sce- nario sheet said she was making $65,944 a year as a single nurse practitioner with no children, said she didn’t know how some stu- dents with lower salaries were going to make it. “I make a good amount of money but I feel like I’m going to run out by the end of this,” she said. Stretching dollars Cook said one thing she had learned from the exercise is that when she is an adult, she’ll need to budget care- fully so she doesn’t run out of money before she is fi n- ished paying all her bills for the month. Giselle Gutierrez and Jose Cortez, who were wait- ing together in line for the housing booth, were mak- ing much less than Cook — about $34,000 and $32,000 respectively. When asked what had been the biggest surprise so far, Gutierrez said it was the cost of health insurance. “I got lucky with insur- ance, because mine is com- pany sponsored, so it’s cheaper,” Cortez chimed in. Gutierrez said the exer- cise was making her feel bad for her parents, and all the budgeting choices they have to make. “My husband doesn’t even work!” she exclaimed, looking at her scenario sheet. “What is he doing?” Liz Marvin, a counselor at Hermiston High School, said she was glad the high school was able to bring back FAB Life for a second year, despite the pandemic. In 15 years of providing educational oppor- tunities for students at the school, she said, “this is the highest student engagement of anything we’ve done.” The kit with scenario sheets for students and price sheets for the volunteers was provided by ECMC Group, a student loan guaranty agency that also teaches fi nancial literacy. It also came with other simulation pieces, such as “crystal ball” cards that teachers walk around and hand students. “Those are the random things in life — Grandma sent $50 for your birthday, your car broke down,” Mar- vin said. She said many students expressed that they hadn’t realized how many expenses they would have each month once they moved out on their own. The goal of the exer- cise was for students to cre- ate a balanced budget on their own, but if they needed help, they could turn to an “SOS” advisor to take a look and walk them through some suggestions of where they might cut some expenses. “In the fi rst group there was a couple whose sheets said they were both single, and they said, ‘Can we get married?’ and I said sure, and they split their expenses,” Marvin said. She said the high school couldn’t have done the FAB Life exercise this year with- out the support from the Hermiston Chamber of Com- merce and the Hermiston Walmart Distribution Cen- ter, which provided most of the volunteers for the booths and prizes — including two television sets — for students to enter a drawing after com- pleting their scenario. his nationally syndicated radio program, “The Osgood File.” Continued from Page A1 People who heard the broadcast began to wonder if that was what happened to “It was pretty devastating to her to lose their relative, and slowly an unoffi cial her big brother,” Sutton said, noting she database of survivors and victims began was just 12 when he died. to take shape. In October 2000, Congress She didn’t talk about it much, he said. It passed a resolution publicly acknowledg- ing the sinking of the HMS Rohna. The res- was too painful. After his mother’s death, Sutton discov- olution stated that the men who died on the Rohna had been “largely forgot- ered that Belles was not on the ten by the Nation” and acknowl- Liscome Bay, but on the Rohna, a edged that “many families still transport ship that was part of a do not know the circumstances convoy moving Allied troops off of the deaths of loved ones who the coast of northern Africa. died as a result of the attack.” According to an account by Sutton said after he found out, the Naval History and Heritage it was strange to realize his uncle Command, Germans attacked had been killed by Nazis and the convoy on November 25, not Japanese soldiers as he had 1943, and again the next day, grown up believing. using new Hs-293 radio-con- He is trying to keep Ker- trolled, rocket boosted glide Kermit Belles mit Belles’ memory alive, and bombs. Forty-one of them recently submitted information missed their mark, thwarted about Belles to fi lmmaker Jack by smoke, radio jamming and Ballo, who has teamed up with extensive anti-aircraft fi re. But historian Michael Walsh to cre- one was a direct hit. ate the documentary “Rhona: “The bomb hit Rohna’s port Classifi ed.” side, penetrated deep into the ship In the documentary’s trailer, on delayed-fuse, and blew holes one woman says she never knew in the starboard side, quickly her husband was a survivor until causing the ship to list to star- he started crying one day while board,” the account states. watching a scene in a television Most lifeboats were destroyed or trapped under debris. Others made it show where a ship was sinking. “He told me the whole story, and told into the water but were quickly swamped by troops and sunk. As neighboring ships me that I could not repeat it,” she said. Sutton said Kermit was one of 10 chil- attempted to rescue soldiers hanging on to debris on rough seas in the dark, some dren in the Belles family, four of whom were sucked under ships or were unable to fought in World War II. Ken was a para- survive the exposure for the hours it took trooper who jumped into Normandy and was awarded a Purple Heart. Tony served to be rescued. Altogether, by the U.S. government’s in the Army in the Philippines. And Bob count, 1,050 U.S. soldiers and more than was in the Navy Seabees. Sutton, a Marine Corps veteran, said 100 Allied troops from other countries were killed in the sinking or died from after seeing his daughter deployed to the their wounds afterward. The exact number Middle East, he said he can’t imagine what of survivors is unknown, but thought to be his grandparents went through. “Imagine having four of your sons in somewhere between 900 and 1,000. Not wanting the Germans to know that World War II, not knowing if they’ll come their new radio-guided missile technology back, and getting that telegram,” he said. The Belles family had moved from had worked, the Army classifi ed the entire event indefi nitely, ordering survivors and Washington to a home on Diagonal Road rescuers to stay quiet under threat of court in Hermiston in 1941, but Kermit’s regis- martial. Gold Star families like the Belles tration card says he enlisted at age 18 in were simply told their loved one was miss- Timentwa, Washington. Sutton said it is unclear why Kermit enlisted there instead ing in action. According to the Rohna Survivors of in Hermiston, and none of Kermit’s sib- Memorial Association, a few survivors lings are alive to ask. He wants people to know what parts began to start sharing the story of the Rohna with their local newspapers in of Kermit Belles’ story he does know, the early 1990s. It gained wider public however. “It’s nice to remember these guys,” he attention in 1993, when CBS commen- tator Charles Osgood shared the story on said. “They paid a big price.” EASTERN OREGON marketplace Place classified ads online at www.easternoregonmarketplace.com or call 1-800-962-2819 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. After hours, leave a voicemail and we’ll confirm your ad the next business day. Email us at classifieds@ eastoregonian.com or fax: 541-278-2680 East Oregonian Deadline is 3 p.m. the day before publication 211 S.E. Byers Ave. 333 E. 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