As Assistant Professor of Government at Dartmouth, Professor Radway teaches courses in public adminstration and is chairman of the interdepartmental major in that field. After graduating from Harvard in 1940, he was with the Office of Price Administration and then the Bureau of the Budget until 1942. He attended the Harvard Business School in 1942-43 and for the next three years served with the U. S. Army, the last year with the Army Transport Corps. From 1946 to 1950, while earning his Ph.D. degree at Harvard, Professor Radway was Teaching Fellow in Political Theory and a Tutor in Dunster House. He joined the Dartmouth faculty in 1950 as Instructor in Government and was promoted to Assistant Professor in 1952.
With his Government Department colleague, Prof. John W. Masland Jr., Professor Radway is engaged in a two-year study of civil-military relations, supported by a $45,000 grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York. With professional military men now called upon to make far-reaching decisions in the diplomatic and economic spheres, the study is endeavoring to determine the extent to which military officers participate in the formation of national policies, the skills and attitudes desirable in officers in such positions, and the extent to which military education is taking into account this dual military-civil responsibility.
PROF. LAURENCE I. RADWAY