The bullet-riddled truck in which four United Nations Command soldiers — two Americans and two South Koreans — were killed in an ambush at the Korean DMZ in April, 1968.

DMZ ambush survivors seen lucky to be alive

Observers at the scene of Sunday night's bold ambush by Communist North Koreans who machine-gunned and killed four United Nations Command soldiers reached one conclusion: "I don't see how anybody survived this."

Rolling Thunder escalated US involvement in Vietnam, pulled ground troops into combat

In 1964, Keith Connolly was a young Air Force pilot and was among the first Americans to fly sorties in the F-100 Super Sabre fighter bomber targeting the North Vietnamese communist insurgency.

Captain of ship that hit PT-109 mourns JFK

The former Japanese Imperial Navy officer who almost killed John F. Kennedy in World War II Saturday mourned the late President's loss to the world.

His hand extended across the Pacific

I'm so upset ... I was a friend ... I couldn't believe it." This was all Prof. Gunji Hosono could say.

Carter meets with Hirohito, Ohira

Lifting his glass to Emperor Hirohito, President Carter declared Monday that the seven nations meeting here for the economic summit conference could plant a seedling that would "blossom into blessings of prosperity — and peace to disadvantaged people all over the world."

Royal couple cheered during tour of Tokyo

The Prince and Princess of Wales went to church and were cheered by thousands of Japanese Sunday during their stay in Tokyo.

Young backs hard line against S. Africa

Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young said he believes that Congress will override President Reagan's veto of tough anti-apartheid sanctions on South Africa and force him to change his walk-soft policy toward Pretoria.