The Globe, the Times, and RFK’s papers
    
    
 
Library of Congress photo via Wikimedia Commons.
There's been a pretty interesting development in the battle over Robert Kennedy's papers. The New York Times reports
 that members of Kennedy's family are unhappy with the John F. Kennedy 
Library in Boston, and may move the papers to George Washington 
University.
The story also says the family decided on March 1 to release 63 boxes
 of papers, some of them "dealing with Cuba, Vietnam and civil rights, 
[that] are classified as secret or top secret."
These would appear to be the "54 crates of records" that the Boston Globe revealed
 last January were being withheld from all but a few favored historians.
 At that time, Robert Kennedy's son Max placed his foot firmly in his 
mouth, telling the Globe's Bryan Bender that he's all for openness 
except in those cases when he's not.
"I do believe that historians and journalists must do their homework,
 and observe the correct procedures for seeking permission to consult 
the papers, and explain their projects," Max Kennedy was quoted as 
saying. Max's boffo performance led me to bestow a Boston Phoenix Muzzle Award upon him recently.
In the Times story, there is no mention of Max. Instead, another of 
Robert Kennedy's sons, former congressman Joe Kennedy, emerges as the 
family spokesman, and he comes off as considerably more diplomatic than 
his younger brother.
A search of the Globe and Times archives shows that the family's 
March 1 decision to release the papers was not reported prior to today's
 Times story. That suggests a deliberate strategy of working hand in 
hand with Adam Clymer, the retired Times reporter who gets the lead 
byline today. Clymer, you may recall, is the author of "Edward M. Kennedy: A Biography," a respected though admiring treatment of the late senator published in 2000.
All in all, fodder for a follow-up by Bender.
This post was originally published at Dan Kennedy's Media Nation blog.