Dillon Professor of International Affairs Joseph S. Nye Jr. said last night that he will likely leave Harvard to serve in the Clinton administration.
Nye declined to specify which post he would assume. He was deputy undersecretary of state for security assistance, science and technology under President Jimmy Carter.
"I will probably be joining the Administration but nothing has been announced yet," Nye said in an interview yesterday.
Nye said he will travel to Washington today to meet with officials on President-elect Clinton's transition team.
"The chances that I might go into the government are reasonably high, but as to the position, I can't say at this time," Nye said.
Susan J. Pharr, chair of the Government department, could not be reached for comment last night, but one top professor indicated that Nye's departure would leave a hole in the concentration.
"We are extraordinarily understaffed in international relations at the tenure level," said Stanley H. Hoffman, Dillon professor for the civilization of France. "We have to do something whether Joe goes to Washington or not."
"But if he goes," Hoffman added, "it is that much more urgent."
Hoffman said the department has already been looking to fill a senior post in international relations.
"Whether he goes to Washington or not, the department will continue to search for one more senior appointment in international relations."
Stanfield Professor of Internation- Hoffman said that, even if Keohane stays on atHarvard, his long commute between Cambridge andDurham, N.C. may contribute to their problem ofunderstaffing. Nye, who authored Bound to Lead: TheChanging Nature of American Power, has arguedthat the United States will continue to play aleading role in world politics. Nye, who was an associate dean of the facultyfor international affairs, was mentioned as acandidate for the Harvard presidency, as well asthe dean of the faculty and dean of the KennedySchool of Government. Several teaching fellows in Nye's popularundergraduate course, Historical Studies A-12,"International Conflicts in the Modern World,"said last night that the professor had notinformed them of plans to leave Harvard. If Nye were to accept a job away from campus,he would have to return within two years in orderto retain his appointment. Read more in News