When I was in college, the first thing we did in acting class was to observe an animal at the zoo and become that animal. So I picked a wallaby.
It's clear enough that there was substantial fraud in Ohio, thus delivering the Electoral College vote for President Bush.
When I graduated from college in the spring of 1970, I decided to hitchhike around Europe with my guitar and my backpack. I was gone for about four months.
There's definitely a world view among college students that appreciates the need to act in the international community.
A number of American colleges are willing to pay a tempting amount to pinch and poke an author for a day or two.
I started going to acting school in my senior year in high school, and I remained in acting school through four years of college.
Every year, many, many stupid people graduate from college. And if they can do it, so can you.
I went to a liberal arts college, and as part of my background, I was majoring in mathematics and physics.
I went to school for creative writing in college, and I wound up about six hours short of my degree.
In many of the high schools in the South Bronx, more children will end up in prison than will go to college.
Coming out of college into the draft, being Asian-American and being from Harvard, that's not going to be an advantage because of stereotypes.
I didn't go to college, I went straight from high school to working on I'll Fly Away, I was very, very lucky.
I did Shakespeare in college, and the nerves I got doing Shakespeare are the same nerves I get doing 'Mad Men.' I want to get the dialogue just spot-on.
I graduated from college in Ohio and bummed around for a while, and then I joined VISTA, which was a domestic Peace Corps kind of thing, and they sent me to Colorado.
School was a waste of time for me. I was bored and left at 16. I started taking correspondence courses at college instead. I did incredibly well. I won an award for my grades.
I like to surf. I like to play guitar. I want to do college classes online. I wanted to do marine biology for a long time, but I don't know.
For the longest time I was afraid I'd have to keep on working at the factories. There was a steel mill and a pottery; if you didn't go to college, you went to work in those places.
They didn't have college scholarships for women. Had they done that at the time, I may have stayed on for another two Olympics, but the opportunities were not available to women that they have today.
I'm a psychologist. I was a psychology faculty member, and then I became an administrator of the department, then the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. At the time of the presidential search, I was the dean.
I don't know if I'd call myself a prodigy, but I was a big forensics competitor in high school, and then during college I spent some time working at speech and debate camps as a coach.
In college I didn't dress up every day, for class or stuff like that, but when it came time to do certain things I'd dress up for sure.