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."

Plans unveiled for new park in South Korea to honor U.S. sailor

The television cameras captured the 1956 ceremony in fuzzy black and white: Masses of people — Americans and South Koreans — in their military uniforms or their Sunday best, dedicating a small stone monument on the outskirts of Seoul to an American who had become something of a national hero in South Korea.

Major leaguers close out with no-hitter

The no-hit parade marched out of the 1990 season in grand fashion.

Nike's disciples pack arena's pews

It was at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics when a Japanese journalist asked Michael Jordan how it feels to be God.

Hoop-groupies gaze at the stars

There they sat like a couple of good-time Charlies sharing a few yuks with some close friends. Just a bunch of locker room banter between buddies with the pop of 10,000 camera flashes illuminating their famous bald domes.

Korea has left its mark on U.S. servicemembers, past and present

The graying U.S. veterans and young uniformed U.S. soldiers who gathered here Sunday didn’t know each other, but they met having shared at least one experience: All have given part of their lives for Korea.

Officials put Douglas' stunning KO of Tyson in limbo

James "Buster" Douglas dropped twilight at noon on world heavyweight champion Mike Tyson Sunday, only to have his 10th-round knockout victory declared invalid because of what boxing officials called a referee's mistake while Douglas was down in the eighth.