Spider martin biography
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Ric Hendee is an advertising executive who served as consumer marketing Vice President for the trade organization Cotton Incorporated. Collection includes advertisements (print, radio, television) and promotional materials; annual reports; audio recordings (audiocassette, CD); biography; business correspondence (emails, letters); client proposals and recommendations; conference materials; consumer and trade (advertising, fashion) periodicals; financial records and investment reports; market research; meeting agendas and minutes; memoranda; newsclippings; newsletters; online news; photographs; press releases; public service television programs; résumés; speeches; and film recordings (VHS, DVD). Topics addressed include advertising, advertising agencies, and advertisers in the United States. Individuals and organizations represented include the Association of National Advertisers, Cotton Incorporated, Dean Witter, Eastman Kodak, Frontli
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Spider Martin
American journalist
James "Spider" Martin (April 1, April 8, ) was an American photographer known for his work documenting the American Civil Rights Movement in , specifically Bloody Sunday and other incidents from the Selma to Montgomery marches.[1][2]
Life
[edit]Martin was born in Fairfield, Alabama. He was slightly built at 5feet 2inches (m) tall and pounds (57kg), and though he would climb trees and church towers to get a different angle for his photographs,[2] his nickname "Spider" dates back to his school days at Hueytown High, where a reporter described him as moving "like a spider" during one of his touchdown runs on the football field.[3]
Whilst working as a photographer for The Birmingham News[4] he was assigned to cover the death of Jimmie Lee Jackson in February ;[3] one month later, he created a notable photograph of the civil rights era, entitled Two Minute Warning,
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