Well, my parents live in Cambridge, Maryland.

I got into Cambridge and it all went downhill.

I find Cambridge an asylum, in every sense of the word.

There is just so much beauty in Cambridge. It's wonderful.

I got locked into a tradition [at Cambridge] of doing comedy.

Living in Cambridge, with nature and everything, it's so clean.

When I was teaching at Cambridge, I sold handbags on the market.

I played varsity soccer at Yale and continued playing at Cambridge.

I worked in restaurants, and I worked in the Cambridge Public Library.

Who knows more about the usage of personal data than Cambridge Analytica?

I went to Cambridge University and was the first in my family to graduate.

I actually didn't grow up in New York. I grew up in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

The use of data for political purposes wasn't invented by Cambridge Analytica.

Cambridge is one of the best universities in the world, especially in my field.

I married a young Englishman in Cambridge in 1955 and have lived in Britain every since.

It wasn't until I got to Cambridge that I discovered active discrimination against women.

I was educated at King's College, Taunton and went to the University of Cambridge in 1942.

When I was a kid, we didn't really leave Cambridge, which was the town where I grew up in.

The Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls are unbeautiful and have comfortable minds.

I can't imagine having a conversation about 'Celebrity Big Brother' in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

I loved being in Cambridge. I think about it often. It was this great little capsule of time to me.

We built a bit of an audience at our university in Cambridge, playing Beethoven and Mozart quartets.

I grew up in Cambridge in England, and my love of mathematics dates from those early childhood days.

Cambridge Analytica never took receipt of any data or undertook any modelling on behalf of Leave.E.U.

The dons of Oxford and Cambridge are too busy educating the young men to be able to teach them anything.

My parents are very proud that I was a 'Blue Peter' presenter and of me going to Cambridge to do economics.

I worked in the theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts for years and moved to New York and then to Los Angeles.

I wasted the 1980s. I wasted every minute at Cambridge talking to people who knew more about music than I did.

At Cambridge, it was the weirdest culture. Everyone pretended they didn't do any work, yet it was so competitive.

After returning from Cambridge in 1936, I did some work with J. M. Mioz on the oxidation of fatty acids in liver.

At Cambridge, there was a completely unintimidating culture, and there were no class divisions among the students.

Cambridge was a joy. Tediously. People reading books in a posh place. It was my fantasy. I loved it. I miss it still.

Universities such as Cambridge, Oxford, and Harvard all began as Jesus-inspired efforts to love God with all ones' mind.

I was born in Cambridge but brought up in and around Winchester, in Hampshire. I've also lived in Hong Kong and America.

We met in our hometown of St. Albans when I had just left school and Stephen was starting his Ph.D. studies in Cambridge.

A lot of people think I hang around Cambridge as this Hogwarts-obsessed Anglophile looking for anyone with a British accent.

Time is a device to stop everything from happening at once ... space is a device to stop everything from happening in Cambridge.

Living here in Cambridge, you had to have an identity. It was not enough to be a wife. So I did a Ph.D. in medieval Spanish poetry.

I think it would be hard to find an American who, during their first week at Cambridge didn't genuinely feel like it was fairy tale.

One of my favorite things on YouTube is the famous 1965 debate between James Baldwin and William F. Buckley at Cambridge University.

What distinguishes Cambridge from Oxford, broadly speaking, is that nobody who has been to Cambridge feels impelled to write about it.

For a year after I left Cambridge, I had an agent, and I was working in a pub and doing waitering. But I could stay at home rent-free.

Boxers don't tend to come from Cambridge or Oxford. Sometimes the things we say don't come out well. We are not known for our vocabulary.

When I left Cambridge, I applied to regional repertory theaters in the U.K. and got accepted by one of them... And here I am, still at it.

My father had always hoped that one day I would be a great cricketer, captaining the Stowe Eleven, perhaps, or even playing for Cambridge.

No one has been buried at Mill Road Cemetery in Cambridge, England, for many years, and so the place has a shady, overgrown magic about it.

My whole life as a grammar-school boy, getting to Cambridge University and working on the 'London Sunday Times' has been very aspirational.

In the fall of 1961, I went up to Clare College Cambridge to read Natural Sciences, with the intention of becoming a biochemist in the end.

Oxford is Oxford: not a mere receptacle for youth, like Cambridge. Perhaps it wants its inmates to love it rather than to love one another.

From my earliest days, reading was my passion, and at Cambridge, where I studied English literature, my intellectual life deepened and grew.

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