Travis Ishikawa will live on forever in San Francisco Giants history after his walk-off, three-run home run to clinch the National League pennant and send the team to the World Series."It's a dream come true -- with all that I've been through in the past five years," he said after the game. "To not even know if I was going to be playing anymore or even be here this season, to be here right now -- it's special." Don't Forget: Giants' Ishikawa Nearly Retired It's no secret that Ishikawa has had a tough year, but he hung on to baseball -- just like his ancestors did.Ishikawa is in a small club of Japanese Americans who play for the MLB, honing a sport that they once played to survive. Giants Win NL Pennant, Advance to World Series "I can remember playing baseball in camp quite a bit and traveling from one corner of the camp to another to play other teams in the camp," said Joe Yasutake, an internment camp survivor.It was baseball that helped keep spirits up after Japanese Americans were ordered in 1942 by the U.S. government to be moved into internment camps. Ishikawa's own paternal grandparents were sent to the internment camps in Colorado. Giants...