I discovered Orson Welles in college; my freshman English professor screened 'Citizen Kane' for us, and I wound up writing a 20-page term paper on it.
Then when I was in grammar school I played the clarinet, and then, after clarinet I played the flute in college orchestra - besides singing in the college chorus and things like that.
After college I worked as an appointee in the Clinton administration from 1992 to 1998.
When I was in college, I wasn't in a fraternity or anything. I always wanted to jump around to all different types of cliques.
I'm going to actively fight for players' rights. Not while I'm in college. I'm always going to keep a consistent track record of what I believe in. But I don't have the clout or the means.
As I stood and gave the eulogy for young Michael Brown last week, I kept thinking about the fact that this child should have been in college instead of laying in a coffin.
I've had tendinitis since college.
I'm not nostalgic for my glory days in college. It was lame for me. Probably because I had no friends.
The cost of college should never discourage anyone from going after a valuable degree.
Going to college offered me the chance to play football for four more years.
The Black Panther Party was not a gang. They grew out of a young black intelligentsia on college campuses.
Undergraduate life on college campuses tends in the direction of neopagan excess.
College campuses were once a hotbed of political activity.
It's unexpected for women's issues to be brought up in places other than women's centers on college campuses or crisis places.
On college campuses, in newsrooms, and now in the highest corridors of power, with Barack Obama in the Oval Office, the politically correct Left is wielding its weaponry with the confidence that it can take down any group, anyone, or anything.
Long ago when I went to college, campuses were about 70 percent male, and until 1970, it was still nearly 60 percent.
Liberals shouldn't cede the responsibility to defend free speech on college campuses to conservatives. After all, without free speech, what's liberalism about?
The 99 percent should be protesting college campuses.
Most of the debates I've participated in have been on Christian college campuses or on secular campuses; so, largely before a student audience.
The war in Vietnam was not lost in the field, nor was it lost on the front pages of the 'New York Times' or the college campuses. It was lost in Washington, D.C.