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."

Three operations kill 2,000 VC

Allied forces in the Republic of Vietnam Monday wound up two major operations and were expecting to end another. Enemy deaths were expected to total more than 2,000.

Two million welcome Johnson in Seoul

President and Mrs. Johnson got a rousing Texas-style welcome here Monday.

U.S., South Korea deliberate Yongsan Garrison move

Once again, as they have for years, the U.S. military and South Korea are talking about the massive task of packing up and moving two major American commands.

U.S. study in '70s explored using nukes against N. Korea

At the same time the Carter administration was mulling options to pull U.S. forces from South Korea in the late 1970s, U.S. officials were studying the use of nuclear weapons to repel a possible North Korean invasion, recently unclassified documents show.

U.S. teams cross DMZ to search for remains of Korean War MIAs

For the first time, U.S. remains recovery teams have crossed the Demilitarized Zone with equipment to search for servicemembers missing from the Korean War.

Editorial: Top O’ The Mast .. For Duration

This editorial appeared on Page 2 of May 14, 1945, edition of Pacific Stars and Stripes.