Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn In Celebration of 175 Years | Page 18

Celebrating 175 Years February 1, 2007, Vose Gal- leries of Boston reception for the Vose exhibit, “Artists of Mount Auburn, 1800-1950” Left: Beth Vose, with Paul Kue- nstner, Program Director, Fidelity Foundation March 1, 2007, David Dearinger Lecture, at the Boston Public Library, discussing NeoClassical sculpture Above (l. to r.): Stephen Krause of Boston; Piper Morris, Vice President of Development, Mount Auburn Cemetery; and Faith Moore of Faith Moore & Associates, Boston Below: David Dearinger, Susan Morse Hilles Curator of Paintings and Sculpture at the Boston Athanaeum; Julie Crites, Director of Program Planning, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum; and Bill Clendaniel Right: Robert Wil- son (center), Presi- dent and CEO of Cambridge Sav- ings Bank, with his wife Marie (left), and Mount Auburn’s Director of Annual Giving Jennifer Gilbert (Photos by Jennifer Johnston) Right: Bill Vose with Bill Clendaniel (Photos by Edwina A. Kluender) Mount Auburn in the News From local websites to distant newspapers, from media focusing on everything from Civil War his- tory to garden design, Mount Auburn’s milestone is attracting public notice that is both widespread and in depth. Coverage about the 175th Anniver- sary has come from the Boston Globe, Boston Herald, and Boston Phoenix, as well as from the Cambridge Chronicle and Watertown Tab and other local media. Specialized national media such as Garden Design Magazine, House & Garden, The Public Garden, Antiques & Fine Arts Magazine, and International Cemetery and Funeral Management have published pieces about Mount Auburn. Media as distant as the Dallas Morning News and the Toronto Sun have run stories concerning the Anniversary as have media serving varied audiences such as the Boston Parents Paper, GoCityKids and Air Tran Go Magazine. Especially memorable were pieces on NECN (TV) done by Greg Wayland and a slide- show of photographs and text on boston.com by Boston Globe columnist Derrick Jackson. 16 | Sweet Auburn