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Makice Name Featured By CSM

When Kevin and Amy Makice scanned the internet last fall for references to their name-to-be, the references were scattered and non-sensical. However, thanks to a short sidebar on the family name change in the May 3, 2000 issue of the Christian Science Monitor, future searches on the web won’t be empty.

Leigh Montgomery, a childhood friend who reconnected with Amy through the internet last year, provided the catalyst to the story at the end of April. On of Leigh’s friends (Jennifer Wolcott) is a writer for the Monitor and was discussing story ideas to help fill some space in an upcoming feature on unusual and modern marriages. When the conversation turned to name changes by married couples, Leigh directed Jennifer to www.makice.net for the full scoop on the origin of “Makice.” Some web surfing and a couple of conversations later, the Makice name was in print.

The short article pulls a lot from the family newsletter published last Christmas. It also includes some links to name-change web sites with resources on how to go through the process.

What’s in a name?
by Jennifer Wolcott


orig. published on 05/03/2000 in The Christian Science Monitor

Will you keep your name or take his? Once news of the engagement gets out, modern brides-to-be are often asked this question. But some aren’t limiting their options to just these two choices. Instead of his or hers, a third name is occasionally chosen by both husband and wife.

Jennifer and David Allyn formed their last name from their middle names — Lynn and Alan. Some couples, such as Kevin McGrew Isbister and Amy Elizabeth Clendening, made a bolder choice of going with an entirely new name. They scrambled their initials (KMI and AEC), and came up with “Makice” as their family name. Although Kevin and Amy had talked about a name change for seven years, they made Makice (pronounced Mah-KEES) legal before the February 2000 birth of Carter, their first child.

“It isn’t as easy as you might think to come up with a brand new name, let alone accept a new identity,” the Makices wrote to friends in last year’s Christmas letter. “After some casual looks at ‘Isbiding,’ ‘Clenbister,’ and even ‘Isbister-Clendening,’ the search shifted to a more practical approach.”

Kevin did the scrambling with a computer program that produced more than 7,000 combinations of their initials. The couple paired down the list until they finally picked “Makice,” in part because of its Scottish flavor. An Internet search on their new name only found a few random references, proving to them its uniqueness.

The Makices now use their original surnames as middle names, which has helped facilitate paperwork during the past several months. With the occasional slip, friends and family are adjusting to the switch. And when he starts speaking, baby Carter will no doubt have an easier time uttering Makice than Isbiding or Clendbister.

When changing a name, documentation can be daunting. Driver’s licenses, credit cards, passports, and insurance forms are just some of the papers that need to be dealt with.

For a fee, a variety of Internet services will navigate people through the process and provide forms. Two of the best can be found at www.dfwx.com/namechange.html and
www.fivestarsoftware.com/namechange/index.html.

For the full feature story on the original web site, read The Christian Science Monitor. (NOTE: CSM Online requires payment for older archived stories. The link above is a free link at press time, but you may eventually be asked to provide credit card information to view the online article.)