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By
Teresa Wippel ‰
Photography
by Zoe Keone
©
2002 by Bridges to Prosperity, Inc.
Ken Frantz enthusiastically recalls the day in March 2001 that transformed
his life forever. Waiting for an oil change at a car dealership
in Virginia, he picked up a National Geographic magazine,
which fell open to a dramatic photograph: a man dangling from a
rope strung between two arches of a broken stone bridge spanning
the Blue Nile River in Ethiopia.
Built
360 years ago, the Second Portuguese Bridge had been partially destroyed
during World War II by Ethiopian patriots desperate to keep Italian
dictator Mussolini's troops from entering their territory. But Ethiopia,
one of the world's poorest countries, had not been able to repair
the bridge, a lifeline for moving everything from grain to live
animals from one side to the other. For 65 years, crossing the river
over the broken span required a group of men standing on either
side with a rope, pulling the person across inch by inch.

When
Frantz saw the photo, the semi-retired construction executive had
an immediate thought: "Here's something that I can do. There's
a tremendous need, and it wouldn't be that hard." Thinking
about the photograph as he drove home from the car dealership, Frantz
had another idea: "Not only could I fix this bridge, I could
see if there are opportunities to fix other bridges." After
talking with his wife, Cheri, and his two pre-teen sons, and after
establishing a non-profit organization, Bridges to Prosperity, Frantz
began writing letters and making phone calls to family members and
friends, requesting their support.
That
the magazine had fallen open to that page "was quite strange,"
said the 1971 political science graduate of Washington State University.
"I had been thinking about what is going to be my legacy, beyond
family and beyond succeeding in business. Personally, for me it
was a calling."
Another
twist of fate was the fact that his brother, Forrest Frantz ('74
General Studies, '78 M.B.A.), had seen the same photograph and had
the identical thought of rebuilding the bridgea coincidence the
pair discovered when they talked a couple of weeks later. Forrest,
who lives in Snoqualmie Pass with his wife, Pat King Frantz ('77
Office Administration), and their two daughters, became a founding
director of Bridges to Prosperity and played a key role in overseeing
the design and engineering of Second Portuguese Bridge.
Ken
Frantz is no stranger to construction projects and bridges, or to
completing them quickly. Growing up in Burien, he, Forrest, and
their three brothersJim ('70 Electrical Engineering), Lawrence
('72 Chemical Engineering), and Marty (x'73 Business Administration)helped
their father, a Boeing engineer, build summer vacation homes. Then
the homes were sold to fund the boys' tuition at WSU.
Frantz
recalls building a 120-unit apartment complex with Marty in 56 days,
setting a national record. And when Frantz relocated his family
from California's Silicon Valley to Gloucester County, Virginia,
in 1992, he fulfilled a longtime dream of buying an islandCuba
Island on the York River. Of course, while building a home on the
17-acre island, he needed to get to the mainland, which required
construction of a bridge.
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these features in the winter 2002-03 issue of Washington
State Magazine.
Taking
the University to the People
Cooperative Extension still offers advice on how to can your
tomatoes or care for your chickens. But it also does much
more, probing an area's needs and providing solutions, in
every corner of the state
Puyallup
Fair
Every year in late summer, over a million people gather in Puyallup
to eat cotton candy, endure the latest thrill rides, and watch
4-H-ers show their stuff.
A
Matter of Survival
One of the simplest truths of nature is that if a species is
to survive, it must reproduce. Faculty researchers explore reproduction's
mysteries and threats.
Tillicum
Village
William Hewitt built his dream on Blake Island. Hewitt is gone,
but his dream lives on in Native tradition and the rich aroma
of roasting salmon.
And
lots more!
Four
times a year, we send Washington
State Magazine free of charge to Washington State University
graduates, faculty and staff.
But
why keep it in the family? To find out how to send
a copy of the magazine to anyone else who would enjoy reading
about Washington State, visit our send
page.
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