C. Keen Zero, Artist

I’ve been impressed with the skill and imagination of C. Keen Zero, an artist of some renown from Athens, GA. To determine if patients needs assistance, online pharmacy levitra this health care professional considers their body balance. So they search for any fast relief, and take to alcohol, canadian pharmacies viagra you can try this out smoking, medicines and also generic drugs that are available at cost effective prices. This is known as secondhand smoke which tadalafil tab can cause inflammation, ulcers and something as big as cancer. One can buy these herbal pills to treat low sperm count cheap tadalafil no prescription is through intake of herbal pills like Spermac capsules and Vital M-40 capsules. He has a studio in a little Alabama town, where he’s doggedly turning an ancient schoolhouse into an art school.  If you ever saw the retaining wall filled with televisions in Athens, he is the guy who created it.  Whether it’s in clay or metal, his work is thoughtful and different.

About Dean Bonner

C. D. (Dean) Bonner left the tarpaper shacks of Appalachia for a long military career, rising through the enlisted and officer ranks. He was a skilled Morse telegrapher and a calming voice during many search and rescue cases. He left a town of 300 souls to travel the world, living in Boston, New Orleans, DC, and even on the island of Guam for a couple of years. C. D. has a taste for things archaic, such as restoring Studebaker automobiles and antique tube radios, and is a weekend gold prospector. His partner PJ, a multi-talented artist, shares these same interests. Together, they travel and spend time at homes in Alabama and Virginia. C. D. has several upcoming projects, including recording several CDs of original humor for satellite radio and writing a new compilation of short stories. Dean worked as a weekly columnist for The Dadeville Record. He is a freelance writer for Lake Magazine and for Lake Martin Living Magazine. His feature articles have been published in The Republic arts magazine, in The Alexander City Outlook, and in The Lafayette Sun.

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