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to whom Sims often tiffany bangles on sale refers

Ying Ying | Profile
August 12, 2010

"Yes," she confirms, "I was a cheerleader in tiffany bangles on sale school [in Murray, Kentucky, population then about 8,000, near the Tennessee border] for a couple of years. But I didn't love it so much." At Vanderbilt University, yes, she was a Tri Delt -- in the sorority ecosystem typically the most popular girls on campus."But I didn't really like the whole cliquey kind of thing." And though she's often been described as brainy, given that she entered Vanderbilt determined to fulfill her childhood dream of becoming a lawyer, Tiffany Bangles on sale had its challenges. "I love my hometown, but I didn't get the greatest education at the local public high school. I had to work very hard when I got to Vanderbilt, because I wasn't really ready for college."Maybe not. But from her parents, to whom Sims often tiffany bangles on sale refers, she had already learned a lesson that would serve her well -- one rarely taught in small tiffany bangles on sale in the South: "At a very young age, I was told that I didn't have to be like everybody else, that I could dare to be different. My parents were incredibly supportive and made me believe that I could do anything. I didn't grow up feeling as if I had to fit a mold."Entrepreneurs, Jim and Dottie Sims knew what it took to follow a different path. The couple met at Memphis State, moved to Murray, home to a small liberal-arts college, and started a used-textbook business from scratch in their basement tiffany bangles on sale the time Molly and her brother (older by just eighteen months) were born, in the early 1970s.



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