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Good morning, Colorado!

I am either the best seat neighbor on a flight youโ€™ll ever get or the worst. As much as I love asking people questions for my job, when Iโ€™m suspended tens of thousands of feet off the ground, Iโ€™m, well, pretty standoffish. Earbuds in, eyes forward, minimal chitchat with anyone around me. Flying, after all, is the one time I can (mostly) ignore my phone notifications and unapologetically take a break from reality.

But Monday night, as my plane landed in Denver after a sun-filled respite in Phoenix, the woman to my left turned toward me, presented me with her palm and asked if I wanted a rock painted as a ladybug.

*Blink blink.*

I silently groaned. I didnโ€™t want a random rock from a random woman, much less one disguised as a bug. But I also didnโ€™t want to be rude, so I plastered a smile on my face and accepted a pink ladybug from her. Back on the ground, the reporter in me returned. I asked this blonde- and purple-haired stranger how long she had been painting rocks and why she gave them away. She told me she started about a year-and-a-half ago, turning ordinary pebbles most of us would never notice into fun-size works of art. Ladybugs. Bees. Gnomes. Coloradoโ€™s state flag. She carries many of her stones with her, gifting them to people she comes across. Their smiles electrify her, she said, and motivate her to keep decorating rocks and doling them out.

After hearing a little more of her story, my smile turned to a genuine one. I didnโ€™t even catch her name (bad reporter!), but I did walk away from our momentary encounter reminded how the simple warmth of a total stranger can mute the chaotic world around us, sparking a little joy that often feels harder and harder to find.

And that, maybe next time I fly, I could try talking to someone beside me. (OK, but not for the WHOLE flight.)

Hereโ€™s my newest and cutest pal. Taking suggestions for her name.

The only cute bug I’ve ever seen. (Erica Breunlin, The Colorado Sun)]*

Now letโ€™s crawl our way down to todayโ€™s top stories, shall we?

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Glenn Minoru Tagawa, an Amache descendant, hands a flower to Dale Hamilton, an Arapaho and Cheyenne descendant of the Sand Creek massacre, to place on the memorial monument at the Amache cemetery during the annual pilgrimage at the Amache National Historic Site in Granada on May 20, 2023. (Hugh Carey, The Colorado Sun)

Federal cuts trimmed staff at Coloradoโ€™s Amache and Sand Creek Massacre historic sites. But advocates fear the impact could be felt beyond staffing shortages at these two sites, as they each deal with preserving the stories describing difficult junctures in American history and could become anti-DEI targets. Kevin Simpson spoke with people connected to both sites.

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Students participate in classroom lessons Feb. 20 at Alice Terry Elementary School in Sheridan. (Jeremy Sparig, Special to The Colorado Sun)

More than 50 Colorado school district leaders are urging House Speaker Julie McCluskie to plow forward with the stateโ€™s new school funding formula next year, despite a longtime funding miscalculation that threatens to upend the formula. Erica Breunlin explains.

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An Xcel Energy natural gas pipeline marker in Boulder County. (Dana Coffield, The Colorado Sun)

Facing questions over its cost, efficiency and environmental impact, the Colorado Public Utilities Commission decided Wednesday to hold hearings on Xcel Energyโ€™s proposed $155 million Mountain Energy Project, Mark Jaffe reports.

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A graphic showing how much the ingredients in a burger have increased
Laura Rautjoki’s “Getting Ready for School” (left), Phillip Toledo’s “Another America,” and Todd Dobbs’ “September 5,” three works on display at the Colorado Photographic Arts Center during a new exhibition about AI in photography. The three artists are participating in a panel discussion Sunday to talk about their photography practices and what to expect in AI-assisted photography. (Photos courtesy of the Colorado Photographic Arts Center)

Month of Photography. What you see is what you see during the 10th annual Denver month of photography, which kicks off this weekend at the Colorado Photographic Arts Center.

Photography in all forms โ€” from analogue photomaking to AI generation โ€” are exhibited in 75 gallery and event spaces along the Front Range, complemented by a sampling of workshops, panel talks, portfolio reviews and harder-to-classify events, like the Beers and Cameras free photo walk, which meets at noon on Saturday at Union Station (for the beers), before heading out on a walking tour of lower downtown (for the cameras).

A few more highlights include a portfolio walk and book fair, an expansive show of Colorado photography from 1945-1995, a food photography exhibit, and an AI exhibition with accompanying panel discussion.

Various prices; March 1-31; Front Range


Take a second to exhale. Weโ€™ve made it to the end of todayโ€™s Sunriser โ€” AND nearly to the end of February. Weโ€™ll see you back here tomorrow and, together, begin counting down the 21 days until spring.

โ€” Erica & the whole staff of The Sun

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Type of Story: News

Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.

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