As soon as I saw it as a word, rather than just a mutilated Harvard, I recognized it as Tolkienian: Harad, the Sindarin word for "the South." In a dream of last night which I haven't had time to post yet, being rather overworked by the sync fairies, a woman addressed me as one of "the Northern Peoples," adding that "you come from a distant land." If the lands of the Northern Peoples were distant for her, I guess that would make her a Southron, one of the Haradrim.
On the topic of RV, my recent scroll-through of a childhood poetry collection turned up this from 1995:
DoctorsSome are orange and some are green,Some are dumb and make mistakes,Some are little, some are mean,Some are URV, but those are fakes.The doctor orange, in truth is black(her clothes are orange, as is her hat).Of singing skills she has a lack.The songs she sings are dull and flat.The doctor who is toothpaste greenA gladiator is by trade.She fights inside a huge machineAnd wears for hair a pair of braids.The little doctors by the score,Pretended grins and trousers blue,All fleck the streets of BaltimoreBecause they have naught else to do.Not least, but last, is DOCTOR URV,A mythic man and phony.His fakes are graded on a curve,Curved round like sliced baloney.Oh, doctors orange and doctors fake,Doctors small and doctors green,Doctors dumb who make mistakes,and DOCTOR URWIN, seldom seen.
URV was a reference to a certain Dr. Irwin Bernard Moore, known as Doc Irv, who was a sort of medical Clifford Banes, so consistently absent from the hospital that people began to suspect that he didn't actually exist. As he became an increasingly mythical personage, it became customary to spell his name with a U and to write it in all caps. (There, aren't you glad I explained that for you!)
Since Irv and URV are pronounced the same, the vowel is irrelevant and can be dispensed with, leaving a capitalized RV.
What happens when URV departs from the Sunlands? Something momentous, no doubt.


