Posts Tagged ‘Sherman George’
MATHEWS-DICKEY BASH
“Amen” actress Ann Maria Horsford was at her best Saturday at the Matthews-Dickey girls’ Sheer Elegance fashion forecast at the Chase Hotel. Some of the area’s biggest political and business types filled the room thanks to Barbara Washington and chairwoman Eleanor Higgins and their diverse committee of volunteers. About 20 African-American high school women with 4.0 GPA averages took to the stage as “Space Princesses.” KPLR11′s Christine Buck and KETC, Channel 9′s Wendy Wiese gave off with self-deprecating humor, while Craig Schnuck hovered over the VIP reception, chatting with the Muny’s Dennis Reagan and hotelier Steve O’Loughlin, with UMSL’s Tom George chiming in. Celebrity escorts were

Celebrity Escorts Fire Chief Dennis Jenkerson, Ameren's Tom Voss and County Exexcutive Charlie Dooley
Ameren’s Tom Voss,U.S. Dist. Judge Dick Weber, Mayor Francis Slay, County Exec Charlie Dooley, License Collector Mike McMillan, jazz stylist Denise Thimes, Fox 2′s Shirley Washington, Retired fire chief Sherman George and his successor Dennis Jenkerson. Fox 2′s Bonita Cornute was escorted by someone in a Darth Vader costume whom insiders suspected was 2′s chief Spencer Koch. Said Martin Luther Mathews, CEO and co-founder of the club,”…We give our girls a chance to unleash their inner passions and reach the fullest potentials and grow into the leaders of their generation.”
SHERMAN HEMSLEY OF “THE JEFFERSONS” & CLIFTON DAVIS LIGHT UP A BENEFIT
If Martin Mathews hadn’t existed, it would have been necessary to invent him. The leader of the Mathews-Dickey Boys & Girls Club rallied entertainment headliners, high-powered corporate blue bloods and supporters to the “Say Amen Banquet” Saturday night at the St. Louis Airport Marriott Hotel, raising $150,000 for the club. With hefty assists by the club’s former CEO chairpersons Ron Fromm of Brown Shoe, Mike Neidorf of Centene, KSDK, the Post-Dispatch and KMOX, the event marked the 50th anniversary of the club, that has remained a cornerstone of our community. Ameren UE’s Tom Voss, with his wife, Carol, said the club “is a treasure for St. Louis.” The Vosses hail from Eureka, Mo., where he said, “We can see as far as seven miles and the stars at night from our deck.” He hailed Martin Mathews as, “Our own Mother Teresa.” Channel 5′s 31-year vet Art Holliday, who served as emcee, said his wife, Linda, didn’t attend. “She doesn’t want to hear me talk anymore,” he joshed. The Post-Dispatch editorial page editor Gilbert Bailon fielded positive comments about his page and admitted, “With so few resources.” Then, he flattered the columnist and noted, “Everyone reads your column.” (Blush-blush.)
Had a great reunion with former singer/dancer Clifton Davis, whom the columnist knew as a press agent at The Muny in the 1968 production of “Hello, Dolly!,” in which Davis was a chorus boy in the Pearl Bailey headlined production. Davis, who is now a minister, continues his foray on the stage. He pointed out, “I’m now negotiating to perform in a play, bound for Washington, D.C., about church folk heading to hell.” Sherman Hemsley, who portrayed George Jefferson in the teleseries, The Jeffersons”, for 11 years, joined in the chorus of “Amen”, with Davis, Anna Marie Horsford, Barbara Montgomery and Roz Ryan. Rev. Earl Nance, chairman of Mathews-Dickey and spiritual leader of the Greater Mt. Carmel Church, said the money raised would be used for educational purposes. Catherine and former St. Louis Fire Chief Sherman George were toasted on their 39th wedding anniversary. Meanwhile, Sherman lashed out at the city’s administration. (Remember, he was demoted for refusing to promote firefighters based on testing, that he claimed was faulty?) George claimed, “There’s no question, that the administration is racist. The mayor, the board of aldermen and its president are on the same page. We need to have a debate on what’s right and what’s wrong with the city.” He added, that both he and former mayor Clarence Harmon are now on the board of the ACLU.
Faces in the crowd included those of: Good News Baptist Church Rev. Byron Crawford and his wife, Shirley; Maritz veep Dan McFadden; former Miss Black USA Kyria Virshelle with Eyekon Records’ Steve Hart and Eddie Hasan. Ida Goodwin Woolfolk received the Bill Maritz Memorial Award and Judge Richard Webber was recipient of the Benjamin F. Edwards Memorial Award.











