Fred Kovaleski

Fred Thomas Kovaleski (October 8, 1924 – May 25, 2018) was an American tennis player, spy, and businessman.

Fred Kovaleski
Born
Fred Thomas Kovaleski

(1924-10-08)October 8, 1924
DiedMay 25, 2018(2018-05-25) (aged 93)

Early life

Fred Kovaleski was born October 8, 1924 in Maynard, Massachusetts, and grew up in Hamtramck, Michigan. Hamtramck was known as a Polish American center, and both of Kovaleski's parents had immigrated from Poland. In high school, he showed aptitude in handball and tennis, and was coached by Jean Hoxie. By age 17, he played on the junior US Davis Cup team.[1]

Education and military service

He enrolled at the College of William & Mary on a tennis scholarship, but enlisted in the United States Army as an air cadet in 1942.[2] In World War II, he helped liberate a Japanese prisoner of war camp in Los Baños, in the Philippines. After the war, he returned to William & Mary and the men's tennis team. With Kovaleski as a member, the team won the 1947 and 1948 NCAA Tennis Championships. At the latter tournament, he and Bernard Bartzen won the overall doubles title.

CIA and business career

After graduation in 1949, Kovaleski continued to play tennis. He competed at the 1950 Wimbledon Championships, losing in the fourth round to Australian Frank Sedgman. Kovaleski was recruited by the Central Intelligence Agency, with international travel providing him a cover for performing espionage. He left the CIA when he fell in love with Manya Jabes, a woman of Russian ancestry, and the CIA did not approve, though the agency would later hire both of them to translate Russian. After the birth of his son Serge, Kovaleski left the CIA for good. He went on to work in the international divisions of Pepsi, Revlon, Schering-Plough, and Nabisco.[1][2]

Personal life

Kovaleski lived in Manhattan when he died of prostate cancer on May 25, 2018. His son, Serge F. Kovaleski, also graduated from William & Mary, and works as an investigative reporter for The New York Times, where he has won a Pulitzer Prize.

Literature

gollark: It's just a presence-in-set lookup.
gollark: Use the hash as the key, then.
gollark: It's a probabilistic thing which tells you if something *definitely* doesn't match or *maybe* does match.
gollark: * hash
gollark: You could probably do something something bloom filter and look up the full hahs if it matches.

References

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