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administration; director of the Ford
Transition Team immediately before Nixon's resignation; and an operative in the White House during the initial phases of the Ford transition. Whitehead pioneered a policy of competition across the telecommunications industries, which later was reflected in
139:(OTP), which he announced at a White House Press conference on January 23, 1970. Having tried to recruit heads for the new office, and finding none that fit the description he had in mind, he took the job himself and was confirmed by the U. S. Senate in 1970.
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Whitehead also served from 1984 to 2008 as a member of the board of directors, Prudential Mutual Funds Family; he was the founder and chairman of the governance committee, as well as director or trustee variously of 116 mutual funds.
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In the spring of 1974, while still working for Nixon and at the encouragement of Gerald Ford's former law partner, Philip Buchen, later counsel to
President Ford, Whitehead secretly organized and led the effort, including
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Between 1969 and 1970, Whitehead served as special assistant to
President Richard Nixon. In this capacity, he crafted the “Open Skies” domestic satellite policy that allowed any qualified private company to launch
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One of OTP's accomplishments included ending the regulatory freeze on the infant cable industry, which then permitted it to compete with television broadcasting and, eventually, the established telephone industry.
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Whitehead's policies also impacted broadcasting directly. “He was credited with formulating policies that gave more autonomy to local stations in the public broadcasting system, which was seen by some
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in management in 1967. In addition, Whitehead engaged in extensive studies in economics, which almost qualified him to write a dissertation in the field, but instead decided finally to leave MIT.
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claims in his memoir that
Whitehead suggested to affiliate stations that they need not carry network news reports such as Cronkite's, and instead could rely on wire dispatches.
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During this time, he was also president of Clay
Whitehead Associates, an international business development company working primarily in the telecom and television industries.
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satellite system, one of the first geostationary satellites. The Galaxy business became the model for satellite television distribution and broadcasting around the world.
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talking to amateur radio operators around the world. He practiced photography with a darkroom of his own design and built his own celestial telescope for studying space.
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232:. Whitehead's design for SES upended the monopolies of government-run, language-specific television and grew tremendously to become the world's largest satellite system.
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92:, Murray Hill, NJ, between 1958 and 1960 under the MIT cooperative program developing experimental design of pulse and analog electronic equipment.
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In a noted 1972 speech, Whitehead used the terms "elitist gossip" and "ideological plugola" to echo the Nixon administration's claims of
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Whitehead served as chairman of the
Yosemite National Institutes board of directors from 1972 to 1985 and a board member until 1993.
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717:
564:, Lawrence Lynn, and Johnathan Moore. Paul, Lewis. (2001-05-24). "Philip W. Buchen, 85, Is Dead; Advised Ford on Nixon Pardon."
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to prosper and created a ripple effect that ultimately led to sweeping and lasting changes in the telecommunications landscape.
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executives as an attack on the service in large part because of Dr. Whitehead's early reputation for antagonizing the press.”
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289:. In 1973, he had married Margaret Mahon. He was survived by his wife, a son, Clay, and a daughter, Abigail Craine. In 2013
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government official who served as special assistant to the president from 1968 to 1970; director of the White House
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passed a house and senate resolution, mourning
Whitehead's death and celebrating his life achievements.
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was the general counsel for OTP at that time. Inspired by the OTP mantra of "manyvoices," Lamb founded
656:, Agreed to by the House of Delegates, February 26, 2009; Agreed to by the Senate, February 28, 2009
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Dr. Whitehead died of prostate cancer in
Washington, D.C., on July 23, 2008. He was 69 and lived in
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Clay T. Whitehead at the Office of
Telecommunications Policy in Washington, D.C. (early 1970s)
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He graduated from
Cherokee County High School in Columbus, Cherokee County, Kansas 1957.
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In 2005, Whitehead was a distinguished visiting professor of communications policy at
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371:"Clay 'Tom' Whitehead, 69; Nixon's telecom advisor revolutionized cable TV industry"
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As a young boy, he was interested in telecommunications, spending hours on his
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Whitehead left Hughes in 1983 and founded Société Européenne des Satellites (
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was director for Congressional and media relations, resigning in 1974, and
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HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION NO. 995: Celebrating the life of Clay T. Whitehead"
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342:"Clay T. Whitehead, Guide of Policy That Helped Cable TV, Is Dead at 69"
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legislation and regulations in the United States and around the world.
228:), the first private satellite business in Europe, which was based in
615:""Comparison of communication satellite operators", Knowledge, the đź’•
55:, the eldest of four children of Clay B. and Helen Hinton Whitehead.
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538:"Philip W. Buchen, 85, Is Dead; Advised Ford on Nixon Pardon"
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Garvin, Glenn (2008-08-03). "His Ideas Launched the Future".
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In 2005, Whitehead was inducted into the Hall of Fame of the
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After leaving government, Whitehead was a visiting fellow at
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in 1979. Scalia resigned in 1972 to become chairman of the
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In 1970, Whitehead led the effort to create the White House
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The Master Switch: The Rise and Fall of Information Empires
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in 1968 as an expert on budget policies, Whitehead was a
626:"Former Distinguished Visiting Professor Whitehead Dies"
472:"White House Asks Open F.C.C. Policy on Use of Space".
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Virginia House Joint Resolution No. 995 (2009-02-28).
190:; Brian Lamb, by then a broadcast journalist; and
77:, earning his undergraduate and master's degrees in
738:Deaths from prostate cancer in the United States
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103:Corporation economist and defense analyst.
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457:"Whitehead Gets New Position".
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369:Bernstein, Adam (2008-08-02).
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666:Accession of Whitehead papers
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217:subsidiary that launched the
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297:at the Library of Congress.
263:The Commonwealth of Virginia
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90:Bell Telephone Laboratories
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733:RAND Corporation people
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28:Clay T. "Tom" Whitehead
198:Post-government career
79:electrical engineering
51:Whitehead was born in
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585:Dr. Clay T. Whitehead
375:The Los Angeles Times
215:Hughes Communications
107:The White House Years
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675:Library of Congress
95:Before joining the
671:2016-03-04 at the
566:The New York Times
542:The New York Times
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346:The New York Times
295:accession ceremony
261:In February 2009,
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713:2008 deaths
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689:Appearances
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562:Brian Lamb
547:2008-11-22
499:2009-04-15
445:pp.187-197
433:0307269930
380:2008-08-02
301:References
291:his papers
230:Luxembourg
141:Brian Lamb
120:including
47:Early life
427:, 2010, (
206:and MIT.
60:ham radio
669:Archived
597:"Galaxy"
508:cite web
269:Personal
241:Virginia
226:SES S.A.
443:). Cf.
415:Wu. Tim
693:C-SPAN
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250:Honors
219:Galaxy
149:C-SPAN
128:, and
122:C-SPAN
425:Knopf
281:Death
83:Ph.D.
40:Nixon
514:link
437:ISBN
429:ISBN
101:RAND
691:on
417:,
239:in
165:PBS
130:HBO
126:CNN
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