click here to return to the Class of 1954 homepage
 

MA writing guidelines

self-written MA format

NOK approval form

funeral attendee form

A-1

B-1

C-1

D-1

E-1

F-1

G-1

H-1

I-1

K-1

L-1

M-1

A-2

B-2

C-2

D-2

E-2

F-2

G-2

H-2

I-2

K-2

L-2

M-2

 

Kenneth E. Brant

No. 1977229 March 1931 - 11 September 1983

Interred in Dayton National Cemetery, Dayton, OH

 

Kenneth Eugene Brant was born in Somerset, PA, to Gordon and Elsie Brant. In 1948, he graduated from Somerset High School and then attended Phoenix College in Arizona for one year. A congressional appointee from the 1st Congressional District of Arizona, Ken entered West Point on 5 Jul 1950 with the Class of 1954.

As a cadet, Ken participated on the Howitzer staff, Portuguese Club, Camera Club, and the Debate Council. He especially enjoyed wrestling and won a monogram as a member of the West Point intercollegiate wrestling team and the Brigade Championship as a member of his company intramural wrestling team. With his prior college attendance, innate thirst for knowledge, and industrious, yet happy-go-lucky, attitude, he was known as a “semi-hive” by his classmates. At 12 p.m. on 8 Jun 1954, he graduated 241st of 633 cadets and, at 3 p.m., married his fiancé, Joan Rossomando, in the Cadet Chapel.

Ken’s active duty Army assignments included Ft. Benning, GA; Ft. Sill, OK; Ft. Bragg, NC; and Aberdeen Proving Grounds (APG), MD. In 1960, he earned his master’s degree in engineering at Purdue University, which led to his assignment to the U.S. Army Ballistics Research Laboratories at APG as scientific research officer. There, he solved problems associated with underground nuclear blast wave propagation, improving the accuracy of conventional artillery firing tables, and the development of rocket and missile fuels.

In 1963, Ken transferred to the Air Force and taught mathematics at the Air Force Academy, where he also conceived, organized, and served as officer in charge of the Cadet Sport Parachute Club. In 1965, he was assigned to the Air Force Institute of Technology Air University at Wright Patterson Air Force Base, OH. In prepara­tion for this assignment, he was selected for a Systems Research Group Fellowship at Ohio State University. Returning to the Air University upon completing his studies, he served as assistant professor for operations re­search in the School of Engineering, then sys­tems development engineer for operations re­search in the Aeronautical Systems Division.

Next, Ken was a risk assessment analyst in the Systems Management Analysis Branch, Deputy for Systems. He was chosen as a U.S. delegate to the Sixth International Federation of Operational Research Societies Conference, where he presented a paper and was a panelist. This work brought distinction to the U.S. Air Force, and Ken was recog­nized as an international authority in opera­tions research and risk analysis. Ken present­ed papers at several other national military and professional meetings and symposiums, including at a NATO Scientific Conference where he also served as chairman. He became editor of the PHALANX newsletter of the Military Operations Research Society and continued to represent the Air Force at other national, international, and NATO conferences, presenting papers and chairing sessions. At a joint meeting of the Operations Research Society of America and the Institute of Management Science, he presented a pa­per on risk management and weapons system acquisition and chaired sessions on military applications of operational research. In 1976, after eleven years of exemplary service in op­eration research, Ken developed a heart condition and retired from the Air Force.

Retirement from a tumultuous Air Force career, however, did not mean that Ken was going to sit on the front porch in a rocking chair. His zest for living and learning, plus his desire to share his knowledge with the next generation of aspiring students, led him to secure associate professorships of math and op­erations research at Wright State University in Dayton.

Ken continued living life to the fullest. Very outgoing and always involved in recreation and athletics, he rekindled his intense interest in and fascination with parachuting and joined the local skydiving club, where he honed his freefalling and team formation skills. He also loved dancing, especially jitter­bugging, even after the popularity of that form passed. While enjoying an evening out with his children, he suffered his fatal heart attack.

A good father, Ken took an active part in his children’s growth and development, instilling his values of self-sufficiency, education, and discipline in them, but still allowing them to pursue their own directions and goals. His leadership contributed to their success in earning bachelor’s and master’s degrees.

Ken had a knack for knowing how to provide unique and special thrills for his kids. From speeding down a county road at 60 miles per hour and experiencing the weightless sensation of topping a rise and going airborne, to “flooring” the gas pedal while the car is at a dead stop in order to “burn rubber,” he knew what kids would find exciting. Other times, it was “cutting donuts” in an empty parking lot during a rare snowfall.

There were the times that he strung a monorail cable, and, for a warm weekend afternoon, the kids became oblivious to everything but flying through the air, holding onto the monorail handlebars, and experiencing those few seconds of thrills that usually existed only in their dreams.

Then, there was the time that he built a ramp from the garage rafters to the alley floor so the kids could convert their red Radio Flyer wagon into their very own roller coaster. There was also the time when he built a self-propelled tricycle from an old lawnmower and the front of a bicycle. The quirky design provided the kids with laughs. Turning left made the contraption go right, and turning right made it go left. For a kid, negotiating a crowded alley with this machine was no small feat. Ken’s children grew to respect their father’s character, and, as they grew older, they took on his values and zest for life.

These are precious memories; how they linger.

Kenneth Eugene Brant was buried with full military honors in the Veterans Administration Cemetery in Dayton, OH.

Soldier, Scientist, Scholar. Well done, loved one. Be thou at peace.

—Family and classmates

 

Originally published in TAPS, September / October 2007

class of 1954 home «    “grip hands” home «    eulogies «