[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 147 (2001), Part 9] [Extensions of Remarks] [Pages 11991-11992] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]IN MEMORY OF ROBERT M. McKINNEY: 1910-2001 ______ HON. TOM UDALL of new mexico in the house of representatives Tuesday, June 26, 2001 Mr. UDALL of New Mexico. Mr. Speaker, I rise before the House of Representatives today to mark the passing of an important American, Robert Moody McKinney, editor and publisher of the Santa Fe New Mexican, the west's oldest newspaper. Over my years of serving the people of New Mexico, I came to know and respect Mr. McKinney. I saw embodied in him the principles of a dedicated public servant and many of the high standards that we expect from a newspaper editor and publisher. He was a man of great wit, humility, intelligence and integrity, and his many contributions to his country will never be forgotten. I join many in mourning the death of Robert M. McKinney and send my heartfelt condolences to his family. I am including for the Record a copy of his obituary, which details his extraordinary career. [From The Santa Fe New Mexican, June 25, 2001] Robert M. McKinney: 1910-2001, Paper's owner Dead at 90 Robert Moody McKinney, editor and publisher of The Santa Fe New Mexican, died of pneumonia Sunday night at New York Hospital. He was 90. His daughter, Robin McKinney Martin of Nambe, was with him. He was a diplomat, corporate director, conservationist, veteran and poet. During a distinguished career, McKinney served as assistant secretary of the U.S. Department of Interior, U.S. ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency at Vienna, Austria, and as U.S. ambassador to Switzerland. McKinney purchased The Santa Fe New Mexican in 1949 and was its editor and publisher for 52 years. Due to health problems from the high altitude of Santa Fe, McKinney sold the company to Gannett Co. in 1976, retaining the right to continue as editor and publisher. After a protracted and celebrated court battle, which he won, McKinney resumed management of the newspaper in 1987 and repurchased the property in 1989. Through his friendship with U.S. Sen. Clinton P. Anderson, McKinney was instrumental in securing the San Juan Chama water-diversion project. He also persuaded St. John's College of Annapolis, Md., to open its western campus in Santa Fe. As publisher, he supported John Crosby's efforts to launch The Santa Fe Opera and staged conferences in the early 1960s on the advantages of managed municipal growth in Santa Fe. Born in Shattuck, Okla., Aug. 28,1910, McKinney grew up in Amarillo, Texas, and graduated from Amarillo High School in 1928. As a teen-ager, he was a cub reporter for the Amarillo Globe News. He received a bachelor's degree, graduating Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Oklahoma in 1932 with a major in literature. Upon graduation, he worked in New York City as an investment analyst at Standard Statistics, now Standard and Poor's. He served as a partner in his cousin Robert Young's investment firm from 1934 to 1950 and became financially successful by investing in bankrupt railroad stock at the depth of the Depression. During World War II, McKinney, was,.a lieutenant junior grade in the U.S. Navy. He helped develop and manufacture the Tiny Tim rocket and participated in D-Day to observe how the devices pierced the armor of German tanks. In 1943, he married Louise Trigg, the daughter of a ranching family from eastern New Mexico. His career in government included appointments by five presidents. President Harry S. Truman appointed him assistant secretary of the Department of Interior in 1951. President Dwight D. Eisenhower named him U.S. ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Commission. He was editor and principal author of a multivolume work on the peaceful uses of atomic energy. [[Page 11992]] President John F. Kennedy appointed him U.S. ambassador to Switzerland in 1961. Under Presidents Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard M. Nixon, he held appointments in the U.S. Treasury Department. He was awarded the Treasury Department's Distinguished Service Medal. Because of Santa Fe's proximity to the National Atomic Weapons Laboratory at Los Alamos, McKinney became interested in peaceful uses of atomic energy, became an authority in that field and published several books on the subject. McKinney served on the board of directors of several major corporations, including the Rock Island Railroad, International Telephone & Telegraph, Trans World Airlines and Martin Marietta. He was a classical scholar, having mastered Latin at Amarillo High School and Greek at the University of Oklahoma. He was a published poet; his book Hymn to Wreckage was rated by The New York Times as one of the 10 best poetry books published in 1947. McKinney's hobby was landscape architecture. Farms he owned in Nambe and Middleburg, Va., were testament to his design skill. McKinney was divorced from Louise Trigg in 1970 and later married Marielle de Montmollin, who died in 1998. He is survived by his daughter, Robin Martin and her husband, Meade Martin; grandchildren Laura and Elliott of Nambe; stepson Laurent de Montmollin of Florida; and stepdaughter Edmee Firth of New York and her children, Marie Louise Slocum and Olivia Slocum, both of New York, and John Slocum of Newport, R.I. Funeral services are pending. ____________________