New York Times Magazine (April 27, 1958).
Abstract:
The American people have always had a consuming and not very sympathetic curiosity about confidential advisers to their high officers of government. The real or supposed influence of such advisers — from Amos Kendall and the other members of President Jackson’s “kitchen cabinet,” to Wilson’s Colonel House and to Harry Hopkins and Harry Vaughan and Sherman Adams — has been an indestructible political issue.
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New York Times