Salk Poliomyelitis Vaccine Telecast - Dr. Roach and Herb Fleet
Identifier
nyuhsl/08kprsb1
Collection
Linked Agent
Repository (rps): New York University School of Medicine
Resource Type
Genre
Description
Dr. Roach (of Eli Lilly & Co.) and Herb Fleet (of Medical Communications, Inc.) during the late afternoon following the scientific meeting. The two are writing an emergency message to be read by Lilly salesmen at any reception point where sound would break down.
The photograph was taken on April 12, 1955, during the live telecast informing the American public that the field trial to test the inactivated polio vaccine was successful. The telecast was filmed at Rackham Hall at the University of Michigan. Eli Lilly & Co. funded the hour and a half long broadcast, narrated by Bob Emerick. It was watched by an estimated 54,000 doctors in special screenings in movie theaters and heard by millions of people around the world on the radio.
Dr. Jonas Salk (not pictured), developer of the poliomyelitis vaccine, received his MD from New York University College of Medicine in 1939.
The photograph was taken on April 12, 1955, during the live telecast informing the American public that the field trial to test the inactivated polio vaccine was successful. The telecast was filmed at Rackham Hall at the University of Michigan. Eli Lilly & Co. funded the hour and a half long broadcast, narrated by Bob Emerick. It was watched by an estimated 54,000 doctors in special screenings in movie theaters and heard by millions of people around the world on the radio.
Dr. Jonas Salk (not pictured), developer of the poliomyelitis vaccine, received his MD from New York University College of Medicine in 1939.
Physical Form
Extent
3.5x5
Geographic Subject
Subjects (name)
Note
Gift of Mrs. Bob Emerick.
Rights
Reproductions are provided for private study, scholarship, and research uses only, in accordance with the Copyright law (Title 17, United States Code). Reproductions are the sole and exclusive property of the NYU Medical Archives and may not be reproduced in any fashion or used for any purpose other than private scholarship without the express written consent of the NYU Medical Archives.