[2] Dypski was born in a two-story row house on Dillon Street in Baltimore on June 21, 1923.
[3] Dypski dropped out of junior high school to serve in World War II.
He was a metallurgical tester and inspector for the Bethlehem Steel Corporation at Sparrows Point.
[2][3] Dypski served in the Maryland House of Delegates, representing Baltimore, from 1967 to 1986.
[3] Dypski died on October 31, 2004, of heart and kidney failure at Mercy Medical Center in Baltimore.