w Page 4-Friday, September 23, 1977-The Michigan Daily he mtChigan :4tng Life with a maligned by-line Eighty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 14 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan THE MEN FROMtA"ALAN17 By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI I've picked the wrong profes- sion. If I was a math TA it would be all right. You're not supposed to be able to pronounce their names. Even a scientist. Their calling cards are rightfully as complica- ted as their chemicals. But I'm a reporter, and in my business a name like Ann Marie Lipinski is a worse affliction than a lisp. TRY IT ONCE. Pick up the phone and ask for someone you know won't be in. Theh leave a message. Tell them, "Ann Marie Lipinski called." "Oh, honey, you're gonna have to spell that for me," the puzzled secretary invariably says. "Mary Ann what?" The handicap, my parents tell me, was self-inflicted. I was messing up my own moniker until the age of three, kicking off a curse that would trail me through life. My mother giggles when she recalls the garbled rendition of the name I used as a child. I steam. "I WAS IN a department store with you once when you were two," she says. "Suddenly I hear a voice over the intercom an- nouncing they've found a -lost child. 'The little girl says her name is Animee Pinski,' the woman said. 'Would someone please claim her?' I went to the nearest saleslady and said, 'I think that name is my daugh- ter.' " "It was too much effort for you to pronounce that big name," she consoles. "It was easier for you to say Animee because that's only three syllables." She mentally calculates the syllables in Ann Marie and discards that line of reasoning. "I know," she offers. "It was the 'R' sound. That 'R' sound is difficult for a little kid." She stops again and recalls that at the age of one I dutifully posed in front of the television set, my hand placed over my heart,, flawlessly executing the Pledge of Allegiance with Captain Kan- garoo each morning. SHE SCANS the patriotic pledge, mumbles over the series of R sounds, and shrugs. "I don't know what your problem was," she concedes. The years have proved the problem was not in me. It is in- herent in the name. And mispronunciation isn't the only stickler. There is also the tactless editing that occurs with a three- word, 16-letter name too fat to pack into contract blanks and computer slots. I receiveda letter from a pub- lishing house three weeks ago ad- dressed to "Ms. Ann Marie." A notice came from my landlady week. "Could we please speak to Jim Tobin?" "Jim's not here," the reporter replied. "Could someone else help you?" "Yes," the secretary sighed. "How about the other co-editor. You know. What's her name?" DRIVEN BY the time-worn "That Girl" jokes, and a still lin- gering fear I possess of the Ital- ian neighbor I had as a child who, each time he spotted me, would bellow, "My Anna Maria!", I every time I pick up Esquire, I resign myself to good company with Arnold Gingrich still domi- nating the masthead. And after all, I've been remind- ed, it could be worse.' LAST SUMMER, while intern- ing for the Miami Herald, I placed a call to a city commis- sioner in Naples, Fla. In his ab- sence, I was left in the hands of the secretary who offered to leave a message for her boss: "Please hAve him call Ann Marie i a t /I t , \ . h " . " .. ., ": E ,,, " ../ ' M " J w r ' y .di .1 The Lance resignation yesterday addressed to "M. Lip- inski." And invariably some jerk will drop the "Marie," hoping the "E" he added onto. Anne will compensate for the five-letter loss. BUT NONE of that is as cruel as the person who scorns the name entirely in exchange for a description. "This is President Fleming's office calling," a sec- retary told a Daily reporter last have considered assuming a nom de plume. Outside of the roman- tic appeal the option holds, I im- agine blissful exchanges with secretaries who smile and gladly take the, messages from Sue Smith. Or letters that appear ad- dressed, complete and unadulter- ated, to Jane Jones. But then I stop and admire the columns of Fox Butterfields and Mopsy Saint-Kennedys that popu- late The New York Times. And Lipinski at the'Herald," I tried. "You must have a terrible time with that name," she gasped. "I have a friend in California with the same last name and she just goes through hell. But she's got it much tougher than you," she ad- ded. "Her last name ends in a Y." Some consolation. 0 Ann Marie Lipinski is co- editor-in-chief of The Daily. P OLITICAL REALITY, after a strange submergence, has emerged fit and strong in Washington. Bert Lancehas resigned. President Carter brought his friends to the capital, Bert Lance chief among them, with a sincere belief that he would be a special President, that he could change the rules and force those already in government to play by them. With Lance's resignation, Car- ter must now realize that there are no superficial routes to greatness. No ar- tistry of image can sustain the nation's need for hard, decent policy. The New York Times, yesterday morning, retold an anecdote about Lance. The day after Carter named him as his choice for OMB director, Lance rolled up at Miss Lillian's Plains house for an economic conference. He was driving an old pichup truck. "This here's a 'Carter limousine,' " he called. "I'm telling you for sure, boy. Things are really going to be dif- ferent now." But nin'e months later-as Lance, Carter and the'rest-of the administra- tion must realize-things are not that much different. It is virtually certain that the President decided Lance had to leave because the Wash- ington of Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd and House Speaker Tip O'Neal decided Lance had to leave. The reason: policy. The kings of the Washington establishment were ap- parently convinced that Lance could no longer be persuasive and strong on Capitol Hill. This is the essence of politics as usual, and it has taken this trauma to convince Carter that the rules are already made, and that politics as usual are the politics he must play. The Lance affair has made clear serious flaws in the pattern of gover- ning that Carter has established. They reflect too great a dependence on a small clique of friends and advisers, and a scorn for the traditional routes of decision-making. Carter has thrown walls around himself. He pledged an open gover- nment, then shaped a White House elite of Hamilton Jordan, Jody Powell, Lance, and counsel Robert Lipshutz. These men do not appear to be duplicates of H. R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman. But Jody Powell's attempt- ed smear of Sen. Charles Percy last week was certainly not encouraging; in any case, as one news account put it, "Too few men with too little ex- perience at the top levels of power had too much responsibility. They were too reluctant to trust outsiders." The record of Lance, their friend from the Atlanta days, was stained, but throughout the controversy they refrained from telling Carter the serious trouble Lance was in. THEY LISTEN to each other," a White House staffer said this week. "They have a tendency to reinforce one another's prejudices." * Carter's White House is arrogant. No one would doubt that Carter was of- fered some very sound, seasoned ad- vice from congressional lords such as Byrd and O'Neal weeks ago. But their election victory has apparently con- vinced Carter's staff that it needs no one's advice. The sour duration of the controversy shows the White House should have listened weeks ago. Carter has understood from the very start of his campaign that the scandal- weary nation has been ready to sup- port a President who will hold aloft a light of decency. But he has responded to that readiness with too-burdensome emphasis on "morality.'' Bert Lance does not seem an im- moral man, but he could not possibly meet the princely standards Carter has set. Now the President has con- fused everyone by defending Lance as a man of honor, but agreeing he should resign. Carter's politics of morality have become dreadfully muddled. Lance is gone, leaving the Carter White House shaken. We hope the lessons have hit home. It is time to move on. TODAY'S STAFF: News: Lori Carruthers, Stu McConnell, Bob Rosenbaum, Margaret'Yao, Mike Yellin Editorial: Jim Robb, Jim Tobin Arts: Wendy Goodman Health Service Handbook By SYLVIA HATCHER and NANCY PALCHIK QUESTION - What sorts of dental care are provided at Health Service? Oral surgery? ANSWER - We have received numerous requests, like yours, for a column on dental services available to students. SThe Health Service does not now have a dentalrclinic although we hope to have one in the future. Students, as well as other com- munity members are, however, eligible to receive both routine and emergency dental care at the University's School of Dentistry. The Dental School is probably the best place in town to go for in- expensive dental treatment. Den- tal students, supervised by Den- tal School faculty, do everything from oral exams to oral surgery, And dental hygiene students per- form routine prophylaxes (teeth cleaning). Emergency dental services are available on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays begin- ning at 8:30 a.m. and 1:00 p.m. on the first floor, Room 1334, of the Dental School. The phone number is 763-3374. Patients are seen on a first-come, first-served basis, so if you come at one of these times be preparpd to wait. The fee is $4.00 if you have never registered for care at the Dental School. Ad- ditional fees for treatment will depend upon the materials used. Happily, there is no fee for labor as working on your teeth also pro- vides an educational opportunity for students. FOR ROUTINE, non- emergency care at the Dental School, the number to call is 764- 1518. Unfortunately, there is usu- ally a long wait (currently about seven to eight months) for a screening that you must go through to determine the edwca- tional value of your case. This means that there is no guarantee you will be accepted as a patient, even after the wait. The trade off is that if you are accepted as a patient, the costs for routine treatment are considerably lower than those you would have to pay for private dental care. If you wish to have your teeth cleaned you can call the Dental Hygiene Department at 764-1544. This does not require prior screening or registration. In regard to your specific ques- tion about oral surgery, the Den- tal School does perform oral surgery either on referral from the Dental School clinic or from a private dentist. If you choose the latter route, the oral surgery de- partment requires a copy of your X-rays and a note from your reg- ular dentist explaining the nature of your problem. For an appoint- ment, stop at the department of- fice. The phone number is 764- 1568. The waiting period for oral surgery will' depend upon your specific problem, but for non- emergency patients, the wait could be up to six months. Please send all health related questions to: The Health Educators U-M Health Service Division of Office of Student Services Ann Arbor, MI 48109 After this week, Health Ser- vice Handbook will appear on Wednesday of each week. Letters to The Daily cavender To The Daily: During the game against Duke, I was appalled at the conduct of George Cavender, director of the marching band. It has been a tradition, that after every Michigan touchdown, the cheerleaders count off the score, doing backward flips. Last Saturday, Cavender repeatedly delayed, and in one case pre- vented the cheerleaders from performing their act. Before the cheerleaders could get started, Caven-A der would launch the band into the "Let's Go Blue" song until the kickoff, and by then the effect of the count-off had been considerably diminished. So stop trying to own the whole show, George. The solution is simple. Let the procedure be as follows: touchdown, a round of "The Victors," the count off, and then you can start the "Let's Go Blue" until the kickoff. Believe it or not, the thirty- second wait won't kill you. Jonathan Hodgdon September 17 anti-chic To The Daily: I am delighted to see that Jeff Selbst has refused to succumb to the pressures of anti-conformist chic. It's inspiring to see someone defend the great Amer- ican right to conform. Why, just think, Mr. Selbst, what would happen if that "disturbing trend" was allowed to continued unchecked - tens of thousands of Ann Arborites walking around not doing the same thing! Looking forward to more forthright, unabashed banality. Bret Eynon September 20 4, . . 4,'. h i -.+., / ! . .. ii4 4y/ / / r /lf y/N / . " =tf ', ~' './///!/r . ./ / -