Leslie Hollie:
CLASS OF 1977

Newport High SchoolClass of 1977
Bellevue, WA
Ringdall Junior High SchoolClass of 1973
Bellevue, WA
Washington Elementary SchoolClass of 1970
Plainfield, NJ
Montlake Elementary SchoolClass of 1969
Seattle, WA
Melody Hill SchoolClass of 1968
Mountlake terrace, WA
Leslie's Story
Life
Rich, adopted a beautiful son. Had him since day one. I am happy, fulfilled and enjoying life. I am a child of the King. I believe in my Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ! Are you save, sanctified, filled with the Holy Ghost?
I am doing great even though my Dad passed on May 6, 2006 and my brother, Thaddies, passed on March 5. 2007.
This is my Dad's obituary that was in the Seattle Times on Thursday, May 11, 2006:
Donald Smith was a pioneer at Washington
Donald Smith, former UW associate AD, in 1977.
Donald K. Smith, who was a pioneer in athletic administration during a 25-year career at the University of Washington, died Monday at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle after a long illness. He was 75.
Mr. Smith was one of the first African-Americans employed in athletic administration at a major university in the country when he was named as the assistant athletic director at UW in 1971. He later served as associate athletic director and was promoted to senior associate athletic director in 1989, a position he held until retiring in 1995.
"He carried the torch for a whole generation of African-American athletes here," said UW associate athletic director Chip Lydum, who is in his 21st year at UW. "He had a direct influence on a lot of individuals during an important period."
Mr. Smith was born in Keokuk, Iowa, and served in the Air Force for four years, including a stint in Korea. He was a 1959 graduate of Iowa State with a degree in technical journalism.
He was the sports and county editor at the Ames (Iowa) Tribune and also worked for United Press International prior to taking a job in 1963 at The Seattle Times, where he was a sports and urban-affairs reporter. He left the Times in 1966 to take a position with Pacific Northwest Bell and was later transferred to AT&T in New York, where he was a public-relations specialist.
He returned to Seattle in 1971 to take the job at UW, where he was hired in the wake of racial unrest that gripped the football program. Mr. Smith helped convince cornerback Calvin Jones to stay at UW rather than transfer to Long Beach State. Jones became an All-American for UW in 1972.
Former UW coach Don James recalled Wednesday that Mr. Smith accompanied former UW athletic director Joe Kearney on the initial interview James had with school officials in Cleveland in 1974. James said Mr. Smith was vital in recruiting, particularly with "kids who had issues about what had happened before."
Mr. Smith was responsible for most of the support areas of the athletic department, including oversight of the weight rooms, video services, housing and food services, recruiting and community relations.
Lorenzo Romar, who played basketball at UW from 1978 to 1980 and is now the Huskies' basketball coach, said, "He was a guy who was always trying to help you."
Former co-workers remember the stories he would tell of his childhood and his days in the military.
"He was a real personality around here because he had been through so much and he had such a great perspective," said Lydum. "It just felt like you were on the porch listening to your grandparents' stories."
Smith also was a mentor to other African-Americans who sought careers in athletic administration such as Herman Frazier, who worked in the athletic department at Arizona State for 23 years and has been the athletic director at Hawaii for the past five.
"We would have conversations about how it would be difficult for young African-Americans to be in this field,'' Frazier said. "The one thing he told me is that you just have to work ¿ you can't take anything for granted ¿ and that we all have to support each other as...Expand for more
we moved throughout the business.
But he was very, very passionate about UW and the athletes there. I remember whenever we would play them, we would get off the bus and there was Don, dressed in his Husky gear.''
Mr. Smith is survived by his wife, Flossie; daughters Valerie, Leslie and Shelly Smith and Azizi Johari; and son Thaddies Bishop. He also is survived by two grandsons, JonMichael and Samuel Smith, and one brother, Alonzo Smith of Evanston, Ill.
A younger brother, Ralph Melvin Smith, preceded him in death.
The University of Washington plans a memorial for Smith but arrangements were still pending Wednesday.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations to the scholarship fund at New Beginnings Christian Fellowship, 409 3rd Ave. South, Kent, WA 98072.
I WAS VERY PROUD OF MY DAD.
ALSO THE LATE GOVERNOR DIXIE LEE RAY DECLARED DECEMBER 1ST AND DONALD K. SMITH DAY IN 1977. That is a great achievement.
I was married on December 19, 1981, to Willie C. Hollie. He was in the Navy. However, he passed on June 6, 1988 in a car fire. I have never remaried. Why should I? My husband still takes care of me to this day.
Many know that my mother died on July 1, 1976.
Sorry I missed the 30 year reunion. No, in way I am sorry, but in a way I am not. The friends that most mattered to me are no longer in my life and haven't been since the early 70's and 80. Like Tami Wise. Why we fell out, to this date I do not know. Linda Zuber Montgomery, that same reason.
John Davis was the love of my life. He came into my life after my mother died. He was my one and only true love. To this day, I still having dreams about him. But I figure we may have ended up in divorce since he has been married 3 times.
I enjoyed Newport. I remember when Karen Vonderlin and I use to go down to the creek during lunch. I remember taking drivers education and learning how drive while I was under the influence of somthing. Karen was the one who nominated me for Homecoming Queen. Karen was a good friend.
Mike Clifford, I wonder where he is. We got married on the same day, December 19, 1981. Which happend to be John Davis' birthday. How ironic. I guess I was still paying some tribute to the man when I got married on his birthday. That year the Huskies went to the Rosebowl. That was my second trip to the bowl. What a good time.
If anyone has seen the Tuskeegee Airman, that was written by my Dad's cousin, Robert Williams. Who passed shortly thereafter. I remember him telling me about the long struggle for it to finally come through and become a film done by HBO. I remember telling Cousin Bob that he had to wait until Lawrence Fisburne was born and grew up along with all the other actors. They were destined and preordained to play those roles. That is why it took so long to be made. Shortly thereafter, he passed from cancer. His house overlooked the Rosebowl in Pasedena and we use to go there before the game and have breakfast and then walk down to the Rose Bowl.
Yes, I wonder where Jeff Currie and Craig Stickler.
Bill Russell, Jr. and I are still friends. Yes, we know who his dad is. We go way back in the day. Back to when I was 14 and he was 16. I cherish that relationship and we still keep in contact to this day.
My son, Samuel, born in 1998, is the joy of my life. He is truly my "Gift From God!" He is an answered prayer according to I Samuel 1. He is truly a blessing in my life and I love him deeply. He is smart, witty, handsome, and will have the ladies chasing him when he is older. He truly is a blessed child of God! He kind of looks like a young Lou Diamond Phillips.
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