Getting into graduate school was pure luck.

I kind of just skyrocketed out of graduate school.

Graduate school is a place to hide for a couple of years.

In some ways I've gone to Cash and Carter graduate school.

Working at Pixar has been like my graduate school for screenwriting.

Travel is the best and probably cheapest graduate school you can buy.

In 2010, I was doing pretty well. I was going to go to graduate school.

So in my uncertainty, I went to graduate school and there it all happened.

When I turned fifty, I decided to quit the mill and go to graduate school.

I am going to graduate school, but that ain't got nothing to do with football.

I like to say that journalism is the graduate school from which you never graduate.

I went to graduate school for directing at AFI in L.A., and I wanted to be a director.

When I started graduate school I was interested in the culture of the Civil Rights Movement.

At a certain point, the graduate school thing didn't work out, and that meant I was liberated.

In graduate school, I was a student of E.L. Doctorow, and he had us read 'Moby-Dick' in a week.

I was in graduate school. I had a birth control accident and went to get the morning after pill.

I was the first one in the family, on either side, to go to college - much less graduate school.

I fought fires in the summer, and then I went back and did it again when I went to graduate school.

In my second year in graduate school, I took a computer course and that was like lightening striking.

I always knew I'd go back to school. Modeling was a means to an end, making money for graduate school.

A lot of the artists that people equate my work to, I didn't find out about until after graduate school.

Friends of mine were the creators and executive producers of 'Damages,' people I knew from graduate school.

When I was at graduate school in London, I began working at NBC News, which had a thriving documentary unit.

Like a lot of people, I sold my first script in graduate school at UCLA, a 'Joan of Arc' for producer Joel Silver.

I was an English major at Yale, but I did do undergraduate theater there. And I went to the graduate school for acting.

I went through withdrawal when I got out of graduate school. It's what you learn, what you think. That's all that counts.

I went to NYU for a year and a half, and I graduated from there and then years later went to Columbia for graduate school.

When I was in graduate school in consumer science and math, all of the big companies had labs, all doing blue sky research.

Graduate school is a really supportive environment, but in a way, it was only when that support vanished that I flourished.

It was actually a women's writing group I belonged to in graduate school that gave me the courage to move from poetry to fiction.

When I started teaching at Stanford Graduate School of Business in 2000, no field-based courses in strategic philanthropy existed.

All through graduate school, instead of having a television I read murder mysteries: Hammett, Chandler, Ruth Rendell, P. D. James.

I was an English major in college, and then I went to graduate school in English at the University of North Carolina for three years.

Aside from a brief stint as a writing tutor during graduate school, I have managed to avoid respectable employment all my adult life.

For graduate school I ended up going to the University of Iowa, which is, of course, the best graduate writing program in the country.

Over my life as a teacher, women have been too quiet. I'm quiet myself. I don't think I said three words the whole of graduate school.

I was born in Beijing and raised in England and America. I studied political science in college and film in graduate school in New York.

I got a sociology degree and then had an opportunity to go to graduate school. But I said no, because I wanted to give songwriting a shot.

My personal advice is to go to school first and get a liberal arts education, and then if you want to pursue acting, go to graduate school.

This was what you did in the '50s: You get married, get a job, put your husband through graduate school, and have two kids - a girl and a boy.

When I was 22, I was thrown out of graduate school and then fired from three jobs in a row at higher and higher salaries where I saved nothing.

When I was 22 years old, I thought girls would like me if I wrote a novel. I spent so much time writing that I was thrown out of graduate school.

I went to college and graduate school, studying philosophy. I really did think I was going to wind up being a lecturer or professor of some sort.

I studied psychology and sociology. I think my assumption was that I would go to graduate school, and I don't know what I was going to do after that.

I went to graduate school at Harvard for one year I worked in the state legislature in Sacramento for one year. I taught school in Compton for two years.

In graduate school, Aubrey Berg at the Cincinnati Conservatory gave me the chance to perform with the best in the country in Broadway caliber productions.

My dad was going to graduate school at Columbia, in New York, so we moved there. After he graduated, we ended up settling in New York, so I grew up there.

When I was at graduate school, you wouldn't have recognised me. I was so different - and not a nice person: a grumpy, surly, upset, confused, lost person.

Probably the first time I was a boss was when I was associate dean of the graduate school at the University of Southern California. I was in my early 30s.

I went to graduate school in Iowa City, at the Iowa Writers' Workshop, where the most passionate thing I did was attend University of Iowa basketball games.

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