
I was born in Harbin, Manchuria, (later China), in 1938. At the outbreak of the Second World War my mother, sister and I, along with other non-combatants of the Allied countries, were taken by the Japanese to an internment camp in Tokyo where we would remain four year–to the end of the war. My mother’s recollection is that I was a sickly child. By the time I arrived in Japan, according to her, I had survived diphtheria, whooping cough, yellow fever, smallpox and tuberculosis. Such afflictions, to my mother’s astonishment, did not keep me from growing to my adult height of 6’6″ and muscular weight of 220 pounds. Nor did they keep me from being strong enough and skillful enough to become a professional basketball player and play 10 years for the National Basketball Association, as the first ethnic Russian and immigrant to do so, and the first to be named to an All-Star team.

I’d love to come on your podcast to discuss true pioneers, especially with Sherman Lewis passing away. The media missed the story on Sherm. His legacy is bigger than an All-American season and 4 Super Bowl rings. Sherman Lewis, a Michigan State trailblazing athlete and coach, dies at 83 – Tom Shanahan Report
The first time I met Michigan State trailblazer Sherman Lewis and what I learned with time – Tom Shanahan Report
Tom ShanahanAward-winning Sportswriter – Tom Shanahan Report My FWAA first-place story on the 1962 Rose Bowl and segregationBest College Football Books The End Game: Race and Sports