Julie Aronson is curator of American paintings, sculpture and drawings at the Cincinnati Art Museum, where she led the development and presentation of an exhibition of Frank Duveneck’s paintings. Lila Feingold reports that — after 10 years in Santa Cruz, California, working as a graphic artist, and 20 years in the Amherst, Massachusetts, area teaching high-school English-language learners — she is back in Waltham: “My husband and I bought a house on Prospect Hill in 2011, and I work (remotely, these days) at New England Donor Services in its finance department. Since I originally come from Auburndale, I couldn’t be more content living here.” Helen Levy-Myers writes that, after closing her business Athena’s Workshop, she reinvented herself as a data scientist. She is now a full-time senior data analyst at CTS, a small government contractor, doing workforce analytics. One son is working full time in Chicago; another is working on a PhD in biology; and the third is in college, studying computer science. Eileen Merker Schneider and husband Marc are enjoying Zooming with Brandeis friends, taking lots of hikes, working from home and hanging out with their 16-year-old dog. Son Michael worked on the Biden/Harris digital advertising campaign through his company, Bully Pulpit Interactive.
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