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American History
Related: About this forumOn August 18, 1962, "Miss Sherri" of Arizona's version of "Romper Room" got an abortion in Sweden.
It made the front page of the local newspaper.
KARINA BLAND
54 years after abortion, no regrets for 'Romper Room' host, but still sadness
Karina Bland The Republic | azcentral.com
Published 9:04 a.m. MT April 15, 2016 | Updated 9:22 a.m. MT April 19, 2016
It was a Sunday night, and Sherri Chessen was watching television in her condominium in an ocean-side retirement community in La Jolla, California. ... Tears streamed down her face.
On TV was the British program Call the Midwife, a drama that follows the lives of a group of midwives working in the poverty-stricken East End of London. A woman had just given birth to a baby, a daughter, with deformed arms and legs. The midwifes face dropped. She spoke cheerfully but couldn't look the mother in the face. A nurse hurried the baby away.
Sherri picked up the remote and pressed the pause button, sobs shaking her whole body. After a moment, she pushed rewind and then play. ... She watched it again.
The scene took her back to the summer of 1962. Sherri was 30 then, married, already the mother of four and pregnant with her fifth child when she learned that a tranquilizer she had taken for morning sickness had been linked to severe birth defects. In July of that year, she made a life-altering decision that would generate international headlines, send her halfway around the world and turn her into a symbol in a fight that had barely begun. ... She would get an abortion.
{snip}
Sherri Chessen was "Miss Sheri {sic}" on the Arizona edition of the nationally syndicated "Romper Room" from 1958 to 1962. Photo By Digital Migration. The Arizona Republic File Photo.
{snip}
{snip}
54 years after abortion, no regrets for 'Romper Room' host, but still sadness
Karina Bland The Republic | azcentral.com
Published 9:04 a.m. MT April 15, 2016 | Updated 9:22 a.m. MT April 19, 2016
It was a Sunday night, and Sherri Chessen was watching television in her condominium in an ocean-side retirement community in La Jolla, California. ... Tears streamed down her face.
On TV was the British program Call the Midwife, a drama that follows the lives of a group of midwives working in the poverty-stricken East End of London. A woman had just given birth to a baby, a daughter, with deformed arms and legs. The midwifes face dropped. She spoke cheerfully but couldn't look the mother in the face. A nurse hurried the baby away.
Sherri picked up the remote and pressed the pause button, sobs shaking her whole body. After a moment, she pushed rewind and then play. ... She watched it again.
The scene took her back to the summer of 1962. Sherri was 30 then, married, already the mother of four and pregnant with her fifth child when she learned that a tranquilizer she had taken for morning sickness had been linked to severe birth defects. In July of that year, she made a life-altering decision that would generate international headlines, send her halfway around the world and turn her into a symbol in a fight that had barely begun. ... She would get an abortion.
{snip}
Sherri Chessen was "Miss Sheri {sic}" on the Arizona edition of the nationally syndicated "Romper Room" from 1958 to 1962. Photo By Digital Migration. The Arizona Republic File Photo.
{snip}
{snip}
Wed Aug 7, 2024: On August 7, 1962, Frances Oldham Kelsey received the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service.
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On August 18, 1962, "Miss Sherri" of Arizona's version of "Romper Room" got an abortion in Sweden. (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Aug 21
OP
Sneederbunk
(15,034 posts)1. Remember it well.
I was 14 and it was the first time I learned what "abortion" was. Also, was introduced to the tragedy of Thalidomide. Her last name of Finkbine was also memorable.
marybourg
(13,142 posts)2. I remember it also. I disagree with her about
how and how much women remember their abortions. Hers was extremely traumatic in several different ways, interrupting and changing the course of her life. Its no wonder she ponders it often. My abortion was necessary in my life and was performed quickly and without trauma or after effect. I dont think about it more often than maybe once a decade, if even then.