virtual pubHawkeye Memories
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Drawings on the pillars in the high school |
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As a matter of fact, the cafeteria at Roosevelt High, which also substituted as the study hall, had an impressive array of Spencer's original caricatures painted on each of the large support pillars. Today, I'm glad I had the foresight to take pictures of some of them. Remember that cameras were not as readily available then, especially when it came to taking pictures indoors. Color film was barely available, and, if it could be found, the cost was impractical. Of course, the pictures I took of the paintings were time exposures on black-and-white film
Dick
enjoyed himself most when he was drawing. He would draw caricatures
of many of his friends on his class notes. I have a number of them
and recall his doing the same for others, so there must be dozens of
such drawingsif not hundreds or thousands of them! He took great
joy in characterizing his friends in those numerous drawings, none
of which were insults, but rather classic fun as Spence's expression
of affection for others.
While in high school, Dick had an accident. A most uncharacteristic thing for Dick to do. It seems he tripped while ascending the stairs and his face came in contact with one of the steps above him, cutting his nose. The severity of the wound didn't seem to require any special attention other than some light disinfectant and perhaps a Band-Aid.
That wasn't enough, however, for a rather severe infection set in and began to cause all sorts of problems for Dick. The infection, I'm told, touched his brain, which was probably the reason he fell into a long-term coma. Many of us went to see him at the Methodist Hospital in Des Moines and were devastated that such a thing could happen to this much-beloved guy.
Things became worse for him, necessitating an extremely long stay in the hospital. I hesitate to comment on the length of the stay, but it was many weeks. On a visit to see him after a week or more, I was shocked to see in the bed this yet-alive, but skeletal, figure that could scarcely speak. Dick was not tall, nor was he very heavy, but he could not have weighed more than 80 pounds when I saw him that day.
Probably the most difficult day of my life, up until that time, was the day I received a phone call from Dick's grandfather asking if he could count on me to be a pallbearer at Dick's funeral! Of course, I knew how bad he looked, but I couldn't imagine that he could be so near death.
Within
the next several days, Dick took a positive turn toward recovery. His
grandfather again called to give me the good news and I returned to
the hospital to see Dick. Yes, indeed, he was better. He looked no
better physically than he had the last time I saw him, but his positive
attitude and smile made it clear to me that he was on the road to recovery.
Dick missed nearly a year of school, so his high school graduation
was postponed, making it possible for him to be in my class, which
surely did not displease me.
Following graduation, Dick enrolled at the University of Iowa at Iowa City and I enrolled at Drake University in Des Moines, so that constant personal contact was suddenly interrupted. We corresponded, of course, and I was most pleased that we joined the same college fraternity (Alpha Tau Omega), although on different campuses.
At the university, Dick was most active in many areas. He became an officer in the ROTC; he was on the university swimming team; he was on the staff of the UI newspaper and yearbook, and I'm sure there were other things about which I am unaware.
The
next interruptions in our lives were twofold. World War II postponed
any plans we might have had; and I made a permanent move to Michigan.
I saw Dick in the uniform of a paratroop officer several times before
I moved, however. I can't help but comment on the fact that this one-time
sickly, death-bound body now found itself in one of the toughest branches
of the service! It was a bit embarrassing to me who was ineligible
for military service for health reasons.
During the war, I frequently corresponded with Dick and, as one might suspect, his V-Mail letters were a joy to receive, each with an accompanying cartoon. He was a cartoonist for Stars and Stripes, a service publication for the troops around the world. I must reflect on the scrutiny that the censors gave to all letters from the servicemen overseas. Anything expressed in the content of a letter that might reveal a semblance of a military secret was eliminated.
Dick was very careful to avoid mentioning the location of any of his many exploits, as well as where he was at the moment; however, in one letter, he stated that he would soon be back into the thick of the action with another jump, carefully eliminating any mention of the location. In the corner of the letter was a drawing of a paratrooper in a diving configuration, diving toward a small sketch of an island that high school geography would help identify as Sicily! By the time I received the letter, the Sicily jump had been completed, but I then knew that Dick had had a part in it.
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"During the war, I frequently corresponded with Dick and, as one might suspect, his V-Mail letters were a joy to receive, each with an accompanying cartoon. He was a cartoonist for Stars and Stripes, a service publication for the troops around the world." |
He made four jumps into military engagements and I understand that he was wounded in all of them and took part in considerable hand-to-hand combat. One of his V-Mail letters, written from France, was of a morbid tone. He said he was paralyzed from the waist downward and he could not walk. His depression was most understandable, but like just about every other disagreeable circumstance he encountered, he recovered to enter a most productive civilian life. Which he most certainly did. His cartooning appeared in many newspapers and magazines around the country; he taught at the University of Iowa; he was on the staff of the Colorado publication The Western Horseman, and, in later years, he became its owner and publisher.
As the years passed, my personal contact with Dick completely disappeared, although a now-and-then letter managed to come into play. Distance has a way of interfering with our lives, but certainly not as it once did in earlier times. I regret that I cannot continue with a more complete biography of Dick Spencer, but perhaps that's already been done. I hope so. He was such an outstanding and contributing person.
Joe Penberthy
Farmington, Michigan
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Well,
Dick is the artist who created Herky the Hawk, that caricaturistic
figure representing the University of Iowa Hawkeyes that everyone sees
whenever a UI athletic team appears on television. In Iowa, I'm sure,
Herky turns up much more frequently than he does in Michiganor
anywhere else for that matter.
Those
trips included long rides to Commerce Park, waaaay out Grand Avenue,
west of Valley Junction. Today, that area has been consumed by the
city of West Des Moines and Commerce Park is probably part of someone's
backyard. We probed the lake and river areas that were major parts
of the park, and Dick would stir up rattlesnakes, whichto mewere
frightening if not repulsive. He carried a hunting knife or two and
impressed me with his ability to target a snake and pin him to the
ground with one of his knives! Obviously, a talent perfected in Texas
and one which I had little interest in pursuing. He'd put a couple
of snakes in a sack, take them home, and produce belts. Now there was
an industrious kid!
The
major reason for Dick's presence on the staff of the paper was for
his talent as a cartoonist, not as a writer, but Dick had a great talent
for writing as well that, I suppose, began developing years earlier.
We managed to produce several interview stories together. 

