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8 result(s) for "Nancy Sneed"
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Olin Corporation
Olin Corporation is a leading vertically integrated global manufacturer and distributor of chemical products and a leading US manufacturer of ammunition. It manufactures chemicals use to make bleach, water purification and swimming pool chemicals, pulp and paper processing agents, and PVC plastics. Olin also distributes caustic soda, vinyls, epoxies, chlorinated organics, hydrochloric acid, and bleach. In addition, the company's Winchester develops and manufactures small caliber ammunition for sale to domestic and international retailers, law enforcement agencies and domestic and international militaries. It is the leading US producer of ammunition for recreational shooters, hunters, law enforcement agencies and the US Armed Forces. Roughly 70% of the company's revenue is generated from the US.
OBITUARIES Series: OBITUARIES
GRAHAM, LONNIE, 48, of St. Petersburg, died Tuesday (Nov. 16, 2004) at home. He came here from his native Indianapolis. He was a lawn mower mechanic and a chef at the former Docksider Restaurant in Tierra Verde. Survivors include two daughters, Karlee Graham, St. Petersburg, and Annette Graham, Bradenton; four stepsons, Steven Dudley, George Dudley, Richard Dudley and Jason Black, all of St. Petersburg; a brother, Larry, Pinellas Park; three grandchildren; and five stepgrandchildren. ALifeTribute FuneralCare, St. Petersburg. MYRICK, HAROLD SR., 80, of St. Petersburg, died Monday (Nov. 15, 2004) at Bayfront Medical Center. He came here in the mid-1940s from his native Sheffield, Ala., and attended public schools in Colbert County. He worked for the city of St. Petersburg for more than 35 years. He was a member of 20th Street Church of Christ. He was an avid cook. Survivors include three sons, Harold Jr., Larry B. and Louis V., all of St. Petersburg; a brother, LaVert, Petersburg, Va.; a sister, Margaret King, Fort Pierce; five grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. Zion Hill Mortuary, St. Petersburg. SUTTON, VIOLET M., 94, of St. Petersburg, died Wednesday (Nov. 17, 2004) at Harbour Wood Nursing Center, Clearwater. Born in England, she came here in 1965 from Brooklyn, N.Y. She was a member of New Apostolic Church in St. Petersburg and the OES in Brooklyn. Survivors include two grandsons, Bruce Roeser, DeLand, and Mark Roeser, Pinellas Park; two granddaughters, Lauren McDaniel, St. Petersburg, and Libby Roeser, Pinellas Park; and six great- grandchildren. National Cremation Society, St. Petersburg.
Explosion shatters peace in quiet neighborhood
Merna and Carl Sneed had lived together in the leafy McNab Drive neighborhood since their home was built in 1956. That peace was shattered yesterday as an explosion leveled the house, killing Carl Sneed, 87, and leaving Merna Sneed, 84, in critical condition with burns over more than 40 percent of her body. \"He tried to help, but it didn't work out because the flames just came in on my husband, too,\" [Nancy Kennedy] said. \"In fact, he has some burns on him.\" \"It just makes you wish you'd worked a little longer so maybe she would not have gotten home so soon,\" [Gay Hawley] said.
Richmond Times-Dispatch, Va., Biz Buzz column
Dec. 19--ENTREPRENEURS SET OUT TO BUILD BETTER MOUSE PAD: Decorative painter Sunny Goode had been on a trip to Europe when she saw a computer mouse pad made of paper. She liked the idea having a mouse pad double as a notepad where the user could write and tear off sheets. When she returned to Richmond, she contacted Ann Parker Gottwald, who has owned One Thing at a Time, a stationery business, for the past 13 years. Gottwald and Goode joined with Lucy Ackerly to create the Mousepaper business. Goode has designed some Mousepaper pads, including a \"Pink Ribbon\" pad to support breast cancer research. Those pads will be available at the One Thing at a Time shop on Douglasdale Road.
Spare the Rod, save the Child
Robert Hampton, author of \"Violence in the Black Family\" and \"Family violence: Prevention and Treatment,\" agrees that \"some discipline is meted out in love.\" \"Treatment for any emotional, psychological or social problem has to take into account a person's culture and ethnicity,\" [Patricia Whatley Showell] says. \"You have to be able to take into account where they are and where they're coming from.\" \"One of the important things I've learned is the same thing doesn't work for everybody,\" says Carole Goodspeed, of Eagle's Wings. \"People need different things at different points in their healing.\"