Public Interest no more?
I've selected my courses for the winter quarter, and boy are they ever business-y... Secured Transactions, Corporations, Business Bankruptcy--where is all of this going? At least I'm taking Professional Responsibility, right? I figure the timing is appropriate. *wink, nod*
About a week ago at a lunch, a fellow Northeastern aficionado asked me what happened to my public-interest focus. It's still there, but has taken up the back seat for two reasons: (1) we receive public interest perspectives in each of our first-year classes, especially in LSSC; (2) as someone who wasn't predisposed to a lot of the innards of American economics, politics and concepts of legal ownership (home-ownership, investments, etc.), I feel as though I should direct my focus toward the type of classes that are going to best prepare me for the state bar exam. Those classes are mainly business-law related courses.
I think that Co-op, on the other hand, is more suitable for exploration of public interest causes. I just applied to the US House of Representatives Committee on the Judiciary for my Spring 2010 Co-op (yes, thinking ahead so that I don't have to concentrate on it during the quarter). If selected, I may be able to work with one or all of the House sub-committee on issues like the Employee Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA), net neutrality, and bankruptcy/finance industry reform. Let's see where this goes.

