The "handwriting was on the wall", during the TET offensive of '68.
The US became a recognized world power.
The Battle of Midway .
William J. Duiker has written: 'Vietnam' -- subject(s): History 'Ts'Ai Yian-P'Ei' 'The essential world history' -- subject(s): World history 'The Essential World History' 'World History to 1800, Volume I (Non-InfoTrac Version)' 'The Comintern and Vietnamese communism' -- subject(s): Communism, Communist International, History 'World history' -- subject(s): World history 'Vietnam since the fall of Saigon' -- subject(s): History 'Historical dictionary of Vietnam' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, History 'Vietnam: Revolution in Transition (Nations of the Modern World: Asia)' 'Cultures in collision' -- subject(s): Nationalism, History
No
The D-Day landings marked the reversal of a Nazi Germany controlled Europe .
Yes, definitely. It prevented the German proposed seaborne invasion of England.
It would depend on which countries army you are referring to. In the case of the US Army then it is possibly the Vietnam War.
The Operation Overlord invasion marked the eventual ending of Nazi occupied Europe .
1492 was a turning point in world history because that was the year when Christopher Columbus discovered the Americas.
A Turing machine is a machine that can perform any possible computation, and emulate any real world computer, except other Turing machines. A Universal Turing machine however, is a theoretical machine that could even emulate Turing Machines. In actuallity they're both the same, since if you fed the tape from a Turing machine into another Turing machine, the second would in essence be emulating the first. Its also useful to note that Turing machines aren't really "machines" per se, but actually models of the process of computation itself.
Freedom
Texas Tech University actually holds one of the most prestigious Vietnam Archives for the war as well as Vietnam culture in the World.