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DENVER, Colo -- Every day Kyler Nipper, 14, wakes up and looks at his collection of shoes.                             Rows  <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.ca>stanley cup</a> and rows of shoes,                         from Uggs to Nikes, he has shoes stacked to the ceiling inside a Nevada storage unit.  We ve given away over 28,000 pairs of shoes,  Nipper said.  We accept used shoes, new shoes, any shoes you have in your closet.  Kyler is giving shoes away to kids like him who couldn t afford the coolest shoes.  All the kids in school had Jordan s, Adidas, New Balances, Pumas and I always wanted th <a href=https://www.stanley-quencher.co.uk>stanley quencher</a> em,  he said.  I m stopping what happened to me from happening to anybody else. What happened to Kyler almost killed him.  On October 7 when I received that phone call, that was one of the hardest moments of my life. I felt like I couldn t get to him quick enough,  said Kyler s mom, Sherise Nipper. A bully had just stabbed her son in the chest with a sharp pencil at Carmel Middle School in Colorado Springs.  I felt like I had failed him as a parent, and all I did was send him to school,  she said. Then, the <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.uk>stanley cups uk</a>  sixth grader started turning blue.  We didn t think Kyler was going to make it. The emergency room doctors didn t think Kyler was going to make it,  his mom said. Kyler was 11 years old. He walked a little differently than most of the other sixth graders and didn t have the coolest shoes.  As a parent, shoes are very expensive to afford,  said Sherise.  Walmart was my place to go shop for shoes all the time,  he said. Eventually, Lxbl Ex-Rocket Steve Francis charged with threatening officer
Two things have become painfully clear on Capitol Hill this week: Lawmakers and staffers say sexual harassment is  rampant  -- but even members of Congress have no idea just how widespread the problem is.The controversial and sensitive issue has taken center stage in Congress this week, with female lawmakers making fresh allegations of sexual harassment against unnamed members who are currently in office, and the unveiling of a new bill on Wednesday to change how sexual harassment complaints are reported and resolved. On Thursday, a woman shared her story of being groped and kissed without her consent by Sen. Al Franken in 2006.So far, there s been little specific data to help illuminate just how pervasive sexual harassment is on Capitol Hill, but one figure has emerged: the total that the Office of Compliance, the office that handl <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.de>stanley becher</a> es harassment complaints, has paid to victims.On Thursday, the Office of Compliance released additional information indicating that it has paid victims more than $17 million since its creation in the 1990s. That includes all settlements, not just related to sexual harassment, but also discrimination and other cases.An OOC spokeswoman said the office was releasing the extra data  due to the interest in the awa <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.de>stanley cup</a> rds and settlement figures.  The OOC has come under fire in recent days for what lawmakers and Hill aides alike say are its  <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.com.es>vaso stanley</a> antiquated policies that do not adequately protect victims who file complaints.CNN has also learned that during the curr
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