
Armless, Legless N.D. Boy is a 'Pretty Lucky' Young Athlete
By JIM HICKS
Minneapolis Tribune Staff Writer
BISMARCK, N.D. – While Mrs. Sherri Finkbine was in Sweden last week, Johnny Kemp – a boy she does not know – was in Bismarck, doing the things that most 12-year-old boys do.
He was eating his breakfast, brushing his teeth, playing third base for the Midget League "Milwaukee Braves," telephoning his friends, swimming and getting ready to work his Sunday newspaper route.
Mrs. Finkbine, from Phoenix, Ariz., underwent an abortion yesterday. She had taken the now-dreaded drug Thalidomide, and she was afraid the child might be born without arms and legs.
Like Johnny Kemp.
THALIDOMIDE was unknown when Johnny was born Oct. 10, 1949, and the stunted-limb deformities now being blamed on the drug were extremely rare. But Johnny's deformities, said his doctor, orthopedic surgeon Paul Johnson, are "exactly the same kind of thing" now afflicting thousands of newborn children whose mothers took thalidomide in early pregnancy.
Johnson described Johnny's condition as "congenital absences of portions of all four extremities." His arms end above the elbow, one leg above the knee, the other at the knee.