Sunday, February 12, 2023

Centennial celebration: Longtime Palouse resident Richard Bruce ‘Dick’ Fry is celebrating a century of life


Centennial celebration: Longtime Palouse resident Richard ‘Dick’ Fry is celebrating a century of life

By Emily Pearce, Moscow Pullman Daily News 2/12/2023
 
Whether or not there may be a withheld secret to living 100 years, Richard “Dick” Fry says it’s all just up to dumb luck.
 
Dick turns 100 years old today, with most of his life spent on the Palouse. Dick said he’s lived a full life — he served in WWII, traveled the world and worked as a journalist in the height of the industry.

His son, James Fry, will be holding a birthday party from 1-3 p.m. today at the Brelsford Visitor Center. James kidded about not bringing gifts, as his father has been blessed with so many birthdays.

Born on Feb. 12, 1923, in Oroville, Calif., Dick joked he was born on a dark and stormy night. He’s the youngest of four children who were all a decade or more older than him.

“My mom was less than two months short of her 40th birthday, so I was kind of a surprise,” Dick said. “But I was just so blessed with and not only having great parents, but with the three older ones. I was spoiled rotten.”

Dick graduated from Oroville High School in 1940, and attended San Jose State until he was drafted into World War II in 1943.

He entered the Army Air Corp, and was stationed in Luliang, China, as an air traffic controller at the China Burma India Theater.

The theater, also known as the Forgotten Theater, was a U.S. military designation during World War II, where aircrafts commonly transported gasoline and supplies. He said an air traffic controller was responsible for directing aircrafts taking off and landing.

Dick’s favorite part about serving in China was the weather — no humidity and it snowed on his birthday once. He said he never saw a chicken in his time spent in China, yet there were always fresh eggs.

“All these people were in the breakfast line and you’d order how you’d like your eggs,” he said.

“You’d order them hard fried, soft fried and medium fried. Once they found out my name was Fry, they never let it down. They picked that up in a hurry, and called me how they took their eggs.”

Spending a little over three years stationed in China, Dick was discharged in 1946 at the rank of sergeant. He went back to San Jose State and finished his studies in journalism.

“All of these things were just plain wonderful luck,” Dick said. “Who put me in the air corps instead of the infantry or the artillery? Just all along the line, just good, wonderful luck.”

He met his first wife, Beatrice Dooley, in 1947 after he went back to attend college. He said she was always beautiful all around; she had red hair, freckles and a great personality. Beatrice served in the Marine Corps from 1944-46, and was discharged as the rank of corporal.

She had always contended that she outranked me,” Dick said.

“She was always so talented, she graduated with honors while I was a routine C+ student. She was a talented writer and such an intelligent person.”

They both graduated in 1947 with a bachelor’s in journalism, and got married a year after in 1948.

He began working as a reporter at the United Press International in 1947. He moved to Pullman in 1952 when he became the editor for the Washington State University alumni magazine, Powwow. Later he went on to work as the WSU sports information director from 1957-70 and the manager for the WSU News Bureau from 1970-85.

Dick and Beatrice proudly raised three children in Pullman. They were married until Beatrice passed away in 1971 from cancer.

He remarried to Marilyn Johnson in 1977, who welcomed him into her family of six children. They were married for 44 years until she passed away in October 2021.

“Marilyn and I traveled the world together. We went back to China, we went to Australia and spent a lot of time in Britain,” Dick said. “She was just a wonderful, wonderful companion and love.”

Writing is Dick’s passion, he said he’s always gotten a kick out of it and “if you have fun, you keep doing it.” Dick published his first book in 1989, “The Crimson and the Gray: 100 Years with the WSU Cougars,” and is working on a few more. Currently, he’s working on “101 Refried Cougar Tales,” as well as “World War II History Around the World, 1112 Days by Trains and Planes.”

Dick is a Palouse celebrity, his son joked. In 2009, Dick was named an honorary WSU Cougar, and in 2017 he was inducted into the WSU Sports Writers Hall of Fame and the Pullman Walk of Fame.

“I’m just so grateful for the life I’ve had,” Dick said. “I had such a wonderful family that took care of me in so many different ways and was blessed with dumb luck that kept me around for so long.”

Happy 100th to WSU legend and goodwill ambassador Dick Fry

 Happy 100th to WSU legend and goodwill ambassador Dick Fry

By Greg Witter, Cougfan.com Feb. 12, 2023




RICHARD BRUCE "DICK" FRY, a beloved member of the Pullman community for 70 years and the great historian of Washington State athletics, turns 100 years old today. He was born in Oroville, Calif., Feb. 12, 1923. But for WSU partisans, the key date is March 1, 1952. That's when Dick joined the Washington State family, as editor of the alumni magazine. He never left Pullman and proceeded to blaze a trail of professionalism and goodwill that's still going strong 71 years later.

 

"I'm going to sound like an old Cougar here," he said early this month when asked for a capstone to the last century. "What a wonderful life it's been in this wonderful town and all the crimson and gray that surrounds it ... every time I turn around I think of someone who helped me along the way."

His 33-year-long WSU career included 13 years as sports information director and 15 as manager of the WSU News Bureau. In the process, and in the years that followed, he won friends and influenced people at a rate that would put Dale Carnegie to shame.

After retiring from the university in 1985. Dick wrote the bible on Washington State athletics — The Crimson and the Gray: 100 Years with the WSU Cougars — that was published in 1989 and remains the go-to for anyone exploring WSU's colorful sports history.

 

The ultimate bridge builder, his lasting presence on the Palouse landscape is captured succinctly in a 2012 Cougfan.com story that began this way: "Dick Fry never completed a pass for Washington State. Never made a basket. Never hit a baseball. Never coached. Never ran the athletic department. That said, it may not be far off to say Fry is one of the most memorable — and important — people ever to come through Washington State's sports scene."

 

He was inducted into the WSU Athletics Hall of Fame in 2009 and remains a Pullman fixture, as sharp and friendly as ever. In a 2005 interview with close friend and former WSU colleague Pat Caraher, Dick was asked if he considered leaving Pullman upon retirement. 

 

"Never a thought ... For all the wonderful things in this community, why would you want to (leave)?" he marveled. "It has almost all the advantages of a big city and none of the disadvantages ... first-class sports, first-class education, first-class entertainment ... everything. I can go into the library and check out a book for a semester ... It's a fantastic place to live."

He added, with emotion in his voice, "My mom used to come up from California and visit. Mom lived to the day before her 93rd birthday ... every time she'd come up here she would say 'aren't you grateful that you had an opportunity to come here and work here?' And all I can say is, "Mom, you're so right, so right."

Asked about the unique spirit in Coug Nation, Fry told CF.C in that 2012 interview, "I'll tell you what: Once a Cougar, always a Cougar. The feeling that these people have for the school is really something. It's very warm and very genuine. Not only is it a very warm and very genuine, but the location; it's kind of one for all and all for one here … the community feeling here is wonderful."

 

Rod Commons, a fellow WSU Hall of Famer and retired sports information director, counts Dick among his closest friends. Asked last month to describe Fry in a sentence, he didn't hesitate. "He really is beyond description. First and foremost, Dick is a consummate gentleman. He is so gracious. I don't care what the situation is or where it is, he is such a gentleman."

 

He adds, "His recall and knowledge of history and events is uncanny. Not just about WSU or sports, but his time in World War II and growing up in the Bay Area. And his storytelling ability is unmatched -- his skills are from an era before mass communication, when stories were the way you communicated."

 

WHEN COUGFAN.COM TOOK FLIGHT in 1998, we asked Dick if we could reprint a few of the great features he had written over the years for the game-day football magazine. By week's end, he'd mailed us an inch-high stack of clippings. A cover note came with the delivery: "If you find anything legible, use as you see fit!"

Here is a sampling from that trove:

·         Two-way terror Clancy Williams: WSU's finest-ever all-around player?


·         The Smilin' Irishman of WSU: When Jim Sweeney roamed the Palouse


·         Don Ellingsen, a clutch Coug in a small frame, one for the ages

·         Everybody's All-American, Bill Steiger, returned to Cougs after breaking neck

·         Babe Hollingbery led a golden age of athletics at Washington State

·         1917 Cougars one of best teams never to smell Pasadena's roses

·         The name behind WSU's mascot Butch is the stuff of legend

OROVILLE, WHERE HE GREW UP, is an old gold rush town 70 miles north of Sacramento. His dad was a miner, dredger and electrician, his mom a homemaker and one-time weekly newspaper correspondent whose love of reading and writing clearly rubbed off on the youngest of her four children.

He started working as a sports writer for the local newspaper while still attending Oroville High, where he graduated in 1940. He spent three years studying journalism at San Jose State before heading off to World War II with the Army Air Corps. He was trained as an air traffic controller ("Ya land 'em if you can see 'em," he quipped.) and spent the last year-and-a-half of the war as a buck sergeant stationed in China as part of the massive Burma Hump air lift of fuel, supplies and troops.

"We were (based) at 6,000 feet and the air clear as can be and the temperature very moderate," he told Caraher. That was important, he noted, because the stress of keeping the steady flow of C-46s, C-87s, C-109s and C-47s out of harm's way was, by itself, intense enough without layering in the severe elements found elsewhere along the Hump system.

 

After the war, he returned to San Jose State to wrap up his degree and there he met his future wife, Bea, a Marine Corps veteran and fellow journalist. He told Caraher it was pretty much love at first sight. They had three children — two girls and a boy and all WSU graduates. Bea died in 1971. In the early 1980s Dick married another wonderful woman, Marilyn, who passed away in the fall of 2021.

 

DICK WENT TO WORK FOR THE United Press in San Francisco right out of college. He was stationed in the Reno bureau when fate sent him north. United Press promoted him to manage the capitol bureau in Olympia and he later became editor of the Chehalis Advocate.

 


An old colleague from United Press, who knew a WSC administrator, recommended Fry for a post in the Washington State College office of information. He arrived eight hours late for his interview due to snow clogging the railroad lines but it was smooth sailing after his train pulled into the Pullman Depot. He started working for the university in March 1952.

He took over the sports information director's role in 1957 and proceeded to become a friend and confidant of administrators, coaches and players, from Buck Bailey and Bobo Brayton to Keith LincolnGeorge ReedGerry Lindgren and Jim McKean. He became manager of the WSU News Bureau in 1970 but remained close to the athletics scene.

 

Asked about all the coaching legends he worked with, Fry said, "Talk about being lucky … Jack FrielBuck BaileyMarv HarshmanJack MooberryJohn Chaplin at the end (of Fry's SID tenure), the great track coach. Babe Hollingbery -- I wasn't here when Babe was coaching, but I got to know him. Bobo (Brayton). It was marvelous ... Doc Bohler was still here (in Pullman). He didn't die until '60. Talk about a legend. Oh man, he was something."

 

ASKED IN 2012 TO NAME THE MOST MEMORABLE Cougar sporting event he witnessed, Fry didn't hesitate. "The Stanford (football) game in 1957," he said. "We were down 18-7 with 3:45 left, and we take over (possession) on our 13. On the first play, Jack Fanning comes off the left wing, and right over the middle, Bobby Newman hits him. He (Fanning) splits the Stanford safeties and goes 87 yards to score.

"We onside kick with Gene Baker from Buckley … and Phil Mast, one of three John Rogers (High School in Spokane) guys who figure in this scenario, recovers the onside kick. Newman marches us down the field and throws a touchdown pass to Ellingsen (a Rogers graduate like Mast and Fanning). We go out front 21-18. Don't look now, but there's still a minute five (1:05) left on the clock! It's just hang on for dear life."

 

The 1958 battle in Spokane between the Cougars and Huskies -- dubbed The Mud Bowl -- is another game that rates high on his list. The Cougars won it 18-14 and finished the season 7-3.

 

DICK'S CONNECTION TO COUGFAN.COM extends farther back than the site's founding in 1998. My first week on campus, as a WSU freshman in 1980, I walked over to French Ad — at my dad's behest— to meet two people in the WSU News Bureau he said would be great mentors: Dick Fry and Al Ruddy. My dad had known them for years and they both welcomed me like a blood relative.

 

Dick and I have checked in on each other with Christmas cards and periodic phone calls ever since. We had a fun conversation the morning of the 2021 Apple Cup. Dick had just returned from his semi-daily coffee klatch -- now in its third or fourth iteration going back to the 1970s -- and assured that the entire gang was confident of a Cougar victory. This past September, we broke bread at a Cougar Collective coaches lunch, where Dick and Rod gave CF.C's Jamey Vinnick a fun walk down memory lane you can read HERE.

 

He's been an incredible resource and support for Cougfan.com since our founding, but more than anything, he's one of the most thoughtful people around. The message he left when my dad died in 2019 was so touching I have it saved and re-listen every now and then. Dick is just a special guy. The mere mention of his name puts a smile on my face. And the fact he's now 100 -- and sharp as ever -- makes that smile even bigger.

 

NOTABLE COUGAR NUGGETS FROM DICK FRY:

 

·         Pete Rademacher, the stout Cougar lineman from Yakima County who won an Olympic Gold Medal in boxing in 1956 and later fought for the heavyweight title, never once laced up the gloves for the Cougar boxing team. He was ineligible to fight collegiately because he was an AAU boxer. He did, however, receive private coaching from legendary WSU boxing coach Ike Deeter.

·         Asked by Caraher about WSU's critical role in Title IX, which changed the face of women's sports starting in the early 1970s, Fry said his conversations with WSU women's coaching pioneers Dorothea Coleman and Carol Gordon as part of his research for The Crimson and the Gray were illuminating about the unfairness of the pre-Title IX era. He remembers Coleman telling him she hoped she'd live long enough where a girl wasn't criticized for throwing like a boy. "It was tear jerker," he said. "I'm delighted to see how women's sports have come along; the progress is amazing."

·          

  Related story: Recounting Dick Fry's thrills and chills in a lifetime watching the Cougars.

 

PHOTO: WSU Hall Famer Dick Fry at Cougar Collective luncheon this past September. (Photo: Cougfan.com/Witter)

 

PHOTO: Dick Fry, at left as manager of the WSU New Bureau in the early 1980s, and right in 1957 as WSC's Sports Information Director. (WSU Photos)

 


PHOTO: Dick Fry (center) with fellow WSU Hall of Famer Rod Commons (right) and Cougfan.com co-founder Greg Witter in September 2022. (Photo: Cougfan.com)

 

https://247sports.com/college/washington-state/Article/Cougar-sports-historian-and-WSU-goodwill-ambassador-Dick-Fry-turns-100-167777060/