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Word: gov (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...present, all of the reserve books for Ec A have been transferred to the Union Library on the second floor while two-thirds of the volumes for History 1 and Gov 1 are in a room nearby with the prospect of being reinforced with the remaining ones...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Union Books Unused as Students Pack Widener, Boylston Libraries | 10/26/1946 | See Source »

...something labelled Humanities 1a. He shuddered when he thought of those other years when he had wandered around in the catalogue, sometimes looking for something big, sometimes for a skill to be learned. But usually the literature or philosophy courses were too narrow or taught in monotones, and the Gov and Ec was too specialized, or somehow irrelevant to his own thinking. They seemed to have no roots. He had stumbled upon General Education. He liked it. There were roots and there were teachers who seemed anxious to teach. It made him wish he had it to do all over...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Vagabond | 10/22/1946 | See Source »

Dewitt C. Poole, visiting lecturer in government, is having all kinds of difficulties in his Gov 18 lectures this week, all because someone spirited away two maps from the classroom, Harvard 6. "These other maps are too small, too inaccurate," he claims, ruminating over the good old days when he had a six foot large map entitled "The World Physical Environs" to illustrate his lectures, and another dubbed "Kolonial Besitzungen des siebzehn und achtzehn Jahrhundert...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lecturer Here Loses Map, Wants It Back | 10/15/1946 | See Source »

...academic in Cambridge these Autumn days. With many students of voting age for the first time in University history, gov. lectures and ordinary bull sessions can find practical application in the polling booths on November 2. This year's electorate has a novel newcomer, the student-voter, who can base his choice upon a maximum of principle and a minimum of self-interest. The important reasons for voting are obvious to all, and newspaper and radio should provide the information necessary for the intelligent voter to decide which levers to pull on election...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Tickee, No Shirtee | 10/8/1946 | See Source »

...Fogg Large Rm. " " 35a Harvard 6 Econ. 21a Emerson 211 " 107a Harvard 5 " 141a Harvard 5 " 145a Harvard 3 Eng. 15a Emerson A " 100a Emerson A " 120a Sever 18 " 170c Harvard 3 German 10 Tu., Th., Sat. at 11 in Sever 21 German 30 Germanic Lect. Rm. Gov. 6a Harvard 1 " 18 Emerson D Greek AB Sever 18 Hist. 22a Emerson A " 32a Emerson 211 " 42a Harvard 1 " 44a Harvard 6 Hist. of Rel. la Hunt Hall Math. 4a Tu., Th., Sat. at 11 in Sever 35 " 5a Sever 36 Math. 5b Mon., Wed., Fri. at 11 in Sever...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CHANGE IN CLASSROOMS | 9/27/1946 | See Source »

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