Campuses Quotes
Collection of top 23 famous quotes about Campuses
Campuses Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Campuses quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
NEPHEW: One cannot be arraigned for declaring a war, which every ruler has to do once in a while, but only for running a war badly.
— Bertolt Brecht
God did not become flesh and suffer an ignominious death at our hands so that we could have sprawling church campuses, programs, and budgets.
— Michael S. Horton
Most of the debates I've participated in have been on Christian college campuses or on secular campuses; so, largely before a student audience.
— Dinesh D'Souza
Undergraduate life on college campuses tends in the direction of neopagan excess.
— Stanley Hauerwas
Better than a sharp stick in the eye.
— James Williams
It's unexpected for women's issues to be brought up in places other than women's centers on college campuses or crisis places.
— Kathleen Hanna
All of Iowa must be campuses and crops.
— Joshua Cohen
On many American campuses the only qualification for admission was the ability actually to find the campus and then discover a parking space.
— Malcolm Bradbury
Now I see a few campuses that are honest
— Gloria Steinem
The Black Panther Party was not a gang. They grew out of a young black intelligentsia on college campuses.
— Bobby Seale
ROTC programs at Ivy League campuses would liberalize the military. That can only be good for this country.
— Evan Wright
The more riots that come out of our college campuses, the better the world for tomorrow.
— William Allen White
Everyday sexual practices on college campuses need to be upended, and men need to feel a cold spike of fear when they begin a sexual encounter.
— Ezra Klein
On campuses, and when I speak to the younger intelligentsia, I am getting a hunger for the text - the authentic text for Jewish knowledge.
— Arthur Hertzberg
The worst thing is that you used to be able to show interesting films on campuses. Those places are all gone.
— Richard Linklater
To be in the present seemed meaningless in practice when the present was merely the place in which to plan for the future or review the past.
— T. Mountebank