Billy Maddalon, a prominent Charlotte business owner, community leader and, most importantly, husband and father, has devoted decades to his role as proprietor of the VanLandingham Estate and the Morehead Inn.
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Our People: Nikolai Mather
Nikolai Mather has earned more than a few impressive distinctions. With a combination of persistence, talent and audacity, he’s become a college student, a leader, an activist, a pioneer — and most recently, a journalist.
Our People: Bernard Davis
In recognition of World AIDS Day and to accompany its annual Life, Positively special issue, qnotes takes the opportunity to speak with Health Administrator Bernard Davis about the provider’s mission, the services it offers, and Davis’ own observations of the ongoing HIV/AIDS epidemic.
Our People: Jordan Chris
Charlotte-born late-twentysomething Jordan Chris could probably tell you a thing or two about intersectionality.
Our People: Linda Lawyer
Linda Lawyer has, as she reports in a fit of modesty which may or may not be characteristic, “a lot of stories.”
Our People: Calla Hales
Calla Hales, administrator of Charlotte abortion provider A Preferred Women’s Health Center (APWHC), is uniquely placed to bear witness not only to what may be some of the most critical moments in individual lives, but to the collision of personal and political on a larger scale.
Our People: Rep. Cecil Brockman
Incumbent Democrat and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte (UNCC) graduate Cecil Brockman, 34, traveled from his native High Point in 2014 to take up his newly-won post in the North Carolina General Assembly.
Our People: Q&A with Kendra R. Johnson
Newly minted Executive Director of Equality NC, Kendra Johnson is a lifelong campaigner for the public good.
Our People: Q&A with Alex Aguilar
Alex Aguilar commits, not only in his role as the larger-than-life, fantastical Merperson in David Valdes Greenwood’s “The Mermaid Hour,” but in all his endeavors.
Our People: Q&A with Gerald Gurss
At a time when I was battling religious brainwashing (thank you, Southern Baptist Church), that chorus became more of a mental health refuge than an arts organization.