I wanted to be Jimi Hendrix's drummer when I was in high school, but I graduated in 1970, the year he died.

On the traditional computer keyboard, I'm a super-fast touch typist. I mastered touch typing in high school.

When I reached my senior year in high school, I fell into a hole that took a couple of decades to get out of.

I was captain of the soccer and basketball teams in high school, and I was the equivalent of class president.

In high school, it was very fashionable to be disdainful of the bourgeois suburbs, but I secretly liked them.

I'm from Wisconsin; well, that's where I went to school from, like, sixth grade till I graduated high school.

Obviously I had gone all through high school and into college, and you don't do that not knowing how to read.

We had guys come out of high school, Moses Malone, Kevin Garnett, LeBron James, but all these guys could play.

I went to Holland Christian High School in Holland, Michigan, and to Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

My high school in Seattle, Lakeside, seemed conservative on the surface, but it was educationally progressive.

I wanted to wear a uniform when I was in high school, but I couldn't. I was like, 'It would be so much easier!'

I grew up in Indiana. My first four years of elementary were in the gym where Coach Wooden went to high school.

The fact is, when I was 15 and a sophomore at high school, I played on the varsity baseball team for the college.

We don't teach kids how to think anymore. We're getting rid of the classics - high school is all about self-esteem.

I met Betty Moore when she entered Mitchell High School as a freshman, and that was it - period, exclamation point!

Well, when I moved to L.A. at 17, I had just come out of high school. I grew up and went to public school in Boston.

Even in high school, when I had injuries, I tried to play with them. When I shouldn't have worked out, I worked out.

I was mentored in high school through the National Hispanic Institute and I did the same for girls when I got older.

I think the first concert I ever went to was maybe a Five Iron Frenzy concert or something when I was in high school.

I played the trumpet for nine years, and then I joined the choir after that, and then I was in musicals in high school.

If they had taught a class on how to be the kind of citizen Dick Cheney worries about, I would have finished high school.

I started making little short films with friends, and then I decided I wanted to get into the school play in high school.

The high point of my entire junior high school career was going backstage to meet George Harrison. I was simply awestruck.

We shot 'High School Musical' in eight weeks. I spent longer rehearsing for 'Hairspray' than filming 'High School Musical'.

In high school, girls started wearing high-waisted pants with their shirts tucked into them. I don't get what that's about.

When I was in high school, I wasn't a nerd, I wasn't a jock. I wasn't a bad kid. I just flew under the radar with my homies.

I started training when I was a senior in high school. I trained at the Combat Zone Wrestling Academy in South Philadelphia.

We want our students to graduate from high school, but we want them to graduate with a plan, whether it's college or career.

In high school, you don't play much defense. It's mostly offense. In college, it's vice versa, and that's what I tried to do.

In high school, I won a prize for an essay on tuberculosis. When I got through writing the essay, I was sure I had the disease.

I went to school at Radnor High School. And I went to a liberal arts college in St. Louis, Missouri, called Lindenwood College.

I started out as a high school teacher in inner-city Chicago and realized quite quickly that my students weren't that motivated.

I guess you could say I was kind of a nerd in high school, so I was in the upper division math courses - I embrace my inner nerd.

After high school I moved out and worked at pizza shops and movie theaters and moved to L.A. for a year and lived with my brother.

Friends who were so supportive absolutely made my high school - that could have been traumatic - they definitely made it bearable.

All students should have the opportunity to receive their high school diplomas and be fully prepared for college or the workplace.

For example, I noticed that every single kid in the high school in 'The Death-Ray' is based on somebody I went to high school with.

I went to Paramount High School, Mayfair High School, all types of high schools. I'm not a high school graduate, but it's all good.

I did my first apprenticeship when I was 15, then joined the union when I was 17. I worked every summer in high school and college.

As a teenager, I struggled a lot, had several major depressive episodes, and ended up dropping out of high school and getting a GED.

When I was in grade school and high school, I did a lot of chorale singing. And the chorus would be tenor, bass, and alto and soprano.

I used to be weak - as did all British fighters - with wrestling, because we don't have high school wrestling or college wrestling here.

The one thing that you can't ever take away are the relationships, the experiences that you have, particularly at the high school level.

Certainly, my exposure in high school to writers like Flannery O'Connor, Shusaku Endo, Fyodor Dostoevsky and Graham Greene was formative.

Oh, yes, I taught 13 and a half years. I taught English, first at a Catholic school and then at El Toro High School in Lake Forest, Calif.

After high school I was going to be an architect. In fact, I was studying to be an architect when the audition for 'The Monkees' came along.

I worked as an intern. I worked at a high school. I worked at a college newspaper while I was taking 18 credits while on the basketball team.

In high school, I was friends with everybody. I had my core group of friends, but I could flow through different social groups pretty easily.

I was involved with my theater program in high school, and I was involved in a festival where I could audition for a lot of different schools.

I'm this high school dropout. I quit in my sophomore year, when I was 15. I worked for a while in a deli, and when I was almost 17, I got married.

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