• Bruce Winters
  • Karen Winters
  • Bruce Winters
  • Karen Winters

Karens 6-0 (CHI & NYC)

A 21-day adventure by Bruce & Karen Read more
  • Trip start
    April 24, 2025

    Pre-Birthday WINE Auction!!!

    April 24, 2025 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 72 °F

    We were at the auction for 11 hours! YES, we worked at unloading the wine cases and bottles from the storage. Who knew there were 4,000 bottles (see photos)? Great day of learning about wines, unloading, serving, sorting and loading, listening to the auctioneer, and "developing silent auction strategies". Karen got her first Birthday Card.

    Of course we tasted a lot of wines and bought a lot of bottles of wine. [The only BUT was that it was Passover and although there was a lot of good food served, we could not eat it. After we left, we immediately went to get "Matzoh Pizza"!]
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  • Chapman University & Opening Day

    April 26, 2025 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 55 °F

    We were at Chapman for a Holocaust memorial Service but we were able to celebrate seeing old friends Ester & Bruce (always juxtaposition sadness with appreciating & loving life).

    Next day was OASIS Sailing Clubs Annual Opening Day. I would say it was a Big Celebration for Karen but she was "working", serving lunch as we enjoyed the "beginning of the season".Read more

  • ZANIES! Comedy Club

    May 2, 2025 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 46 °F
  • Holocaust Museum - Skokie, Ill 1 of 3

    May 4, 2025 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 48 °F

    We spent over 5 hours at this museum, the World's largest Holocaust Museum besides Yad Vashem and D.C, and learned so much (just when you think you knew most about the rise and fall of the Nazis and the aftermath). https://www.ilholocaustmuseum.org

    I did take 130+ photos of "KEY signage and displays" (I could have taken a lot more) but I am posting just 3 posts of them here. A very emotional day for all. Thank you Aimee, Chris, Julie, and Brian for joining Karen & I.
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  • Holocaust Museum - The RESISTANCE 2 of 3

    May 4, 2025 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 52 °F

    First Hand Accounts- Anita Lawler Wallfish

    We had the opportunity to “interview” Anita Lasker-Wallfisch (she will be 100 years old in July), a German-British cellist, and a surviving member of the Women’s Orchestra of Auschwitz. She played marches as the slave laborers left the camp for each day's work and when they returned and gave concerts for the SS. In October 1944 after being saved from the gas chambers of Auschwitz by her cello playing, she was then sent with 3,000 others to Bergen-Belsen, living on almost no food for 6 months until liberation. She published her story in 1996 in a memoir called Inherit the Truth.

    The Shoah Foundation's Visual History Archive has over the last 27 years recorded 55,000 testimonies in 65 countries in 43 languages. Twenty-four of them are unique like Anitas since it is using a technology called “Dimensions in Testimony” that enables people to ask questions that prompt real-time responses from pre-recorded video interviews with Holocaust survivors and other witnesses to genocide. The pioneering project integrates advanced filming techniques, specialized display technologies and next generation natural language processing to create an interactive biography. This allowed us to have conversational interactions with these eyewitnesses to history to learn from those who were there.

    The Dimensions in Testimony interviewee is recorded in a green-screen environment surrounded by cameras and in front of a microphone. The interviewer asks questions. Each answer is recorded as a separate video clip. About 1,000 questions are posed – and answers given. This results in a list of responses that can be prompted by questions posed verbally by audience members. Using natural-language technology, the Dimensions in Testimony system transforms asked questions into search terms. The system then matches the search terms to the most appropriate interviewee response to your question and plays back the associated video clip, resulting in a conversational-like experience. The system logs every question and answer. To improve the accuracy of the system, trained staff at USC Shoah Foundation review the system logs to make sure the most appropriate answer was chosen for each question. When necessary, staff manually link to the more appropriate response. As a result, the quality of the system improves with every question asked. What you see is a 3-dimensional video projection of the person answering your question. Amazing.
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  • Holocaust Museum- LIBERATION 3 of 3

    May 4, 2025 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 52 °F

    The architect- Stanley Tigerman (September 20, 1930 – June 3, 2019) was a Jewish, American architect, theorist and designer, famous for many buildings including this Holocaust Museum.

    The architectural features make it a place (65,000-square-foot) as both history and memorial. A theme throughout the building is the journey from darkness to light, clearly in the exterior’s starkly divided dark and light wings, and carried out as you travel through the interior. The dark wing faces southeast towards Jerusalem, while the light wing faces due east in anticipation of a Messianic Age. You enter the museum’s dark side, where dark walls and sharp angles represent the descent into darkness and the horrors of the Holocaust. Dark and light sides are connected by a “hinge” that symbolizes the rupture in humanity that occurred during the Holocaust (leading to an actual German rail car of the type used to transport Jews to concentration camps. The light side of the Museum uses soft rounded edges and natural light to emphasize exhibits that represent the rescue and renewal of Holocaust Survivors. The upper level of the building’s light side houses spaces for reflection.

    Materials and joinery were left exposed in their natural, undecorated state to represent transparency, a response to the deception used by those responsible for the Holocaust. The two columns at the entrance of the Museum are titled “Jachin” and “Boaz” and are designed to the exact dimensions of the columns of Solomon’s Temple as described in I Kings. Crowning the Museum’s exterior are six points of light, representing the six million Jews who perished.
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  • The Celebration Continues

    May 4, 2025 in the United States ⋅ 🌧 48 °F

    Aimee, Chris, TuTu and Baxter made another Dinner Party!