Word: thats
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Steven R. Donziger, one of three ECPIP members who delivered the 813 letters to Clark yesterday, said the meeting with the dean "was constructive in that we seemed to be able to get our point across that student outcry has not died down."
"The purpose of these letters and the meeting," ECPIP member Lori M. Wallach said, "is that we want him to recognize that there's a cost to operating against the majority's wishes."
Last week, an open meeting of the public interest advisory committee-- appointed by Clark in October to examine the future of the field at the Law School--attracted about 80 students. But the letter, endorsed unanimously by the Law School Council, is the largest protest on the issue since 1055...
This month's form letter stressed that the public interest "crisis" and "student outcry" over the closing of the counseling office have not "died down," as Clark told The Crimson in October.
"He seemed appreciative of the time and effort on the part of the students," Donziger said, "and...he did seem surprised that there were so many letters. We felt like the dean demonstrated remorse over these comments as he did in earlier over comments he made in national publications."