THE NAME GAME (continued from page 47) presents exclusire A/fichig - an trunk shows and personal appearances by America's leading- bridal designers and representatives ILISSA, ILISSA 2000 AND GRAND TRADITION Thursday, Friday & Saturday February 11, 12 & 13 WALENTINE COLLECTION Thursday, Friday & Saturday February 18, 19 & 20 ALYCE DESIGNS PROMS - FORMALS AND MOTHERS GOWNS Thursday, Friday & Saturday February 25, 26 & 27 JON BRADLEY FOR THE COUTURE COLLECTION HEADPIECES Thursday, Friday & Saturday March 4, 5 & 6 VAN LEAR BRIDALS Thursday, Friday & Saturday March 11, 12 8. 13 HOUSE OF BLANCH! Thursday, Friday & Saturday March 18, 19 & 20 THE BRIDESMAID COLLECTION OF WATTERS 8. WAITERS, BILL LEVKOFF & NEW IMAGE Thursday, Friday & Saturday March 25, 26 & 27 For more information & reservations * please call LINA'S BRIDAL OF PLYMOUTH at (313) 455-1100 570 South Main Street • Plymouth *Appointments are required "Let me take care of your last minute details & make your wedding day and rehearsal as worry free as possible" Special Offering - with this ad - $50 OFF Call for details Party Planning Invitations 25%Off 352-0835 24724 LAHsER-SouTHFrELD 48 •JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1993 • STYLE Renee Cherrin Erlich gether, Rosenbaum-Soverinsky is a mouth- ful. If it were short, I probably would have hy- phenated but its really long and awkward. I think my mom asked me if I was going to hy- phenate my name, then she said Rosenbaum- Soverinsky out loud and started laughing." Of course, there are always those fortunate few who don't even have to think about the issue. In March, Bonnie Katz of Baltimore will marry Neil Katz, whom she met on a blind date in December 1991. "People have always teased us about it," says Bonnie. "I've joked about keeping my last name and hyphenat- ing it as Bonnie Katz-Katz— or calling my- self Bonnie Katz squared. Actually I'm relieved that I don't have to worry about changing my name." In the spirit of compromise — one of the little things that makes marriages work some women now are using their maiden name professionally and taking their hus- band's name for social venues. They can pre- sent a united family front without sacrificing the professional names they've made for themselves. This is the route I decided to take, particularly because I'd been writing profes- sionally under the name Colino for several years before my husband and I got married. For the most part, leading a double life has suited me just fine: Work colleagues know me by one name; friends know me by two. But using surnames interchangeably can have its drawbacks – not the least of which is re- ceiving double the usual junk mail and being asked for money not once but twice by the same solicitors. (I suppose one could make an environmental argument against this arrangement; it does waste paper.) It can also be confusing to remember whose name Sat- urday night's dinner reservation was made under. Then, there are those awkward mo- ments when people don't know what to call you. I don't get offended when people get it wrong. After all, I'm proud to be called by either name. As for social gaffes they can and often do— happen to both my husband and me. More often than not, they simply provide comical moments. Lately my husband has been getting mail and calls for Mr. Colino, and so far he's just played along. In fact, being something of a feminist, he seems to enjoy it in a perverse sort of way. Or maybe he just gets a kick out of having the tables turned. Either way, he hasn't corrected them yet. II Stacey Colino is a freelance writer based in San Francisco.