President Obama once said he wants everybody in America to go to college. What a snob.
I've lived in New York for 40 years. I came right after college.
You can actually go to school and college to learn how to play and get technical with the electric bass.
I'm the first one out on the dance floor. In college I had to take jazz, ballet and tap dancing, but, before that, it was just social.
I was excited when King's College announced a scholarship for students who are in developing countries.
I went on a few auditions for Broadway musicals, and never stopped taking classes, but I didn't take it seriously until I was out of college.
African American children can't be educationally disadvantaged for 12 years and then experience a miracle cure when it comes time for admission into college.
I was very lucky. I left college, and Richard Eyre was in charge of the National Theatre. I was offered the lead in 'The Seagull' with no experience and went on to do five plays there.
When I bought 'The New York Observer,' my experience in journalism was limited to a single article I had written for a college magazine.
If you don't give your kid freedom to make choices with money, including stupid choices, he'll make plenty when he gets to college.
For a while after college, I was thinking of becoming a fitness trainer, and I am a certified aqua trainer.
Both of my parents are professors and everyone in my family has some fabulous degree of something or another and I couldn't get into college because I didn't know a language.
My grandfather worked in a shoe factory - he was an Italian immigrant. My father was the first to go to college in the family.
College on for sure... I'm scared to say it cause it sounds like a family movie, but if my kid was 7, 8, 9 I would take her to this quickly and gladly!
I never took classic business classes in college, so I don't have the background that any of the people running large companies have.
I was actually the manager of the games department of an amusement park when I was at college, so I understood the coin-op side of the games business very well.
Believe it or not, lots of people change their majors and abandon their dreams just to avoid a couple of math classes in college.
I grew up in a home and in a world in which you can do anything. We were all expected to go to college. My father was a doctor.
My main home is in Fayetteville, Arkansas, a college town in the Ozark Mountains. I live on the highest hill in a quiet cul-de-sac, surrounded by friends.
In Venezuela, which doesn't have thousands of prestige universities like the U.S., people usually stay at home while attending to college. After they graduate, they move for a job or get married.
Look at all the marriages that have been wonderfully successful where fellows finished their army service and came home to go to college on G.I. bills and their wives worked.