It started with an insult and glove-slap, but ended in "bromance."
Read all about "the most incredible encounter between enemies in World War II"!
Camp Perry hasn't always hosted the National Matches. Once, it hosted prisoners of war.
Field Marshal Rommel was a formidable foe. Here's what America learned from him.
Hollywood movies aside, Dick Proenneke proved that a lone man can survive Alaska's brutal beauty.
On D-Day, the Sten gun served as a drum while the bagpipes played the soldiers ashore.
America's best "secret weapon" of World War II wasn't an arm at all...it was our Native Americans.
During WWII, so much depended upon "a tough little animal that even a lion would hesitate to bite."
He may have written "A Farewell to Arms," but this literary giant was a firearms fanatic.
Make no mistake, the ancient sling was no slingshot...and it was definitely not a toy.