<p>I would like the opinion of a current Cornell student for this question:</p>
<p>I have been accepted ED to ILR and I'm really interested in business and law but more so in business. However, I have a great distaste for politics so my question is:</p>
<p>How politically/government-oriented is ILR and what are the classes like?</p>
<p>Thanks a bunch.</p>
<p>P.S. anyone else accpeted to ILR please respond and tell me something about yourself. :)</p>
<p>Hey, I was accepted ED to ILR. I'm an 18 yr old male, I enjoy driving, reading, long walks on the beach..... Uhh, yeah. I'm from Upstate NY, originally from NJ. I like hockey?<br>
I'M GOING TO THE CORNELL/BROWN GAME TONIGHT!</p>
<p>I also hate politics, lol, so I can agree with you there. From what I have gathered, you can focus in other things than politics, though that is certainly available for those who desire to focus in it. I am also going as a prelaw sstudent, and I am more interested in the corporate stuff than the political garbage (I am more green party than anything else, so umm, yeah... Call me frustrated? George W. is a fu**ing retard!).<br>
Are you going prelaw? If so, any ideas for law schools?</p>
<p>the most politics you'll see in ilr is probably from labor history ... and even there the discussion is more oriented towards past political decisions rather than current-day politics (it is a history class, after all). </p>
<p>i havn't encountered much political debate at all in the classes, so it's nothing to stress over</p>
<p>I really want to go to ILR...ahhhh!!!</p>
<p>guys, what were asked in ILRinterview?</p>