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  1. Tháng 11/1941, tên xe được đổi thành Harry Hopkins I nhằm vinh danh Harry Hopkins, cố vấn cho Tổng thống Roosevelt. Chiếc tăng không đạt khi thử nghiệm ở Trung Đông do vấn đề nhiệt và lái trên cát. Sáu xe đầu tiên chỉ được sản xuất năm 1943, đến lúc này Quân đội Anh vẫn ...

  2. 9 de jun. de 2020 · Harry Hopkins’ Influence on New Deal Policies. by Dr. June Hopkins, Armstrong Atlantic State University . The cultural and political currents that shaped American society during the early decades of the twentieth century had a decided effect on the configuration of the American welfare system as it appeared in the 1930s.

  3. Harry Lloyd Hopkins was born August 17, 1890, in Sioux City, Iowa, and graduated cum laude from Grinnell College in 1912. He began his career in social work and in 1914 was named executive secretary of the Board of Child Welfare. During World War I, Hopkins served as head of the Gulf Division of the American Red Cross and later of the ...

  4. 23 de may. de 2018 · Harry Lloyd Hopkins (1890-1946), American statesman, was a Federal relief administrator and personal confidant and emissary of President Roosevelt during World War II. Harry Hopkins was born in Sioux City, lowa, on Aug. 17, 1890, the son of a harness maker.

  5. Harry Hopkins. Harry Hopkins (1890-1946) – polityk amerykański, członek Partii Demokratycznej, jeden z najbliższych współpracowników Franklina Delano Roosevelta, współautor Nowego Ładu oraz programu Lend Lease. Urodził się 17 sierpnia 1890 roku w Sioux City, w stanie Iowa, jako czwarte dziecko w swojej rodzinie.

  6. Harry Lloyd Hopkins ( 27. elokuuta 1890 – 29. tammikuuta 1946) oli yhdysvaltalainen poliittinen taustavaikuttaja ja presidentti Franklin D. Rooseveltin monivuotinen läheinen avustaja. Hän oli yksi New Dealin pääarkkitehdeistä. Toisen maailmansodan aikana Hopkins toimi Rooseveltin ehkä tärkeimpänä neuvonantajana. [1]

  7. In January of 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt invited Wendell Wilkie, who had lost his own bid for the presidency the year before, to visit him at the White House. Sitting in front of the fireplace in the Oval Office, Wilkie steered the topic of conversation to Harry Hopkins, who was Roosevelt’s most trusted advisor. […]