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Widgetsx3
05-15-2003, 09:49 PM
Leola Starling of Ribrock, Tenn., had a serious telephone
problem. But unlike most people she did something about it.

The brand-new $10 million Ribrock Plaza Motel opened nearby and
had acquired almost the same telephone number as Leola.

From the moment the motel opened, Leola was besieged by calls not
for her. Since she had the same phone number for years, she felt
that she had a case to persuade the motel management to change
its number.

Naturally, the management refused, claiming that it could not
change its stationery.

The phone company was not helpful, either. A number was a number,
and just because a customer was getting someone else's calls 24
hours a day didn't make it responsible. After her pleas fell on
deaf ears, Leola decided to take matters into her own hands.

At 9 o'clock the phone rang. Someone from Memphis was calling the
motel and asked for a room for the following Tuesday. Leola said,
"No problem. How many nights?"

A few hours later Dallas checked in. A secretary wanted a suite
with two bedrooms for a week. Emboldened, Leola said the
Presidential Suite on the 10th floor was available for $600 a
night. The secretary said that she would take it and asked if the
hotel wanted a deposit. "No, that won't be necessary," Leola
said. "We trust you."

The next day was a busy one for Leola. In the morning, she booked
an electric appliance manufacturers' convention for Memorial Day
weekend, a college prom and a reunion of the 82nd Airborne
veterans from World War II.

She turned on her answering machine during lunchtime so that she
could watch the O.J. Simpson trial, but her biggest challenge
came in the afternoon when a mother called to book the ballroom
for her daughter's wedding in June.

Leola assured the woman that it would be no problem and asked if
she would be providing the flowers or did she want the hotel to
take care of it. The mother said that she would prefer the hotel
to handle the floral arrangements. Then the question of valet
parking came up. Once again Leola was helpful. "There's no charge
for valet parking, but we always recommend that the client tips
the drivers."

Within a few months, the Ribrock Plaza Motel was a disaster area.

People kept showing up for weddings, bar mitzvahs, and Sweet
Sixteen parties and were all told there were no such events.

Leola had her final revenge when she read in the local paper that
the motel might go bankrupt. Her phone rang and an executive from
Marriott said, "We're prepared to offer you $200,000 for the
motel."

Leola replied. "We'll take it, but only if you change the
telephone number."

DBackFan
05-15-2003, 09:53 PM
OMG that is just too good!

adair
05-15-2003, 10:06 PM
LOL...good one

DreamWarrior
05-16-2003, 04:22 AM
LOL

twinkiesmom
05-16-2003, 06:43 AM
WTG Leola! lol

wingsfan
05-16-2003, 06:46 AM
TOO funny! Thanks for sharing that!

ksmomof2
05-16-2003, 07:11 AM
lmao! That was hilarious! Thanks for the laugh. :D

Kitcat
05-16-2003, 08:12 AM
That's too funny!

newwiccan
05-16-2003, 08:19 AM
Too funny! Thanks!

flute
05-16-2003, 09:05 AM
Had someone in a local town take some pizza orders, and it got rid of her calls, too ;)

Maeryn
05-16-2003, 12:47 PM
A family friend had that problem when a new health club opened up in town. She refused to change her number, because she'd had the same one for twenty years. The health club refused to change their number, until the day the sports writer for the local paper came in and was told they had no raquetball court reservation for him. Hmmm..wonder how that happened?

When I was a teenager, we got a new phone number that was one digit away from Social Service's. You can imagine what that was like. My mom worked swing shift, and was getting woke up first thing in the morning by people calling to ask where their check was. The phone company gave us a new number without charge!

redrig
05-16-2003, 01:00 PM
Growing up we used to get calls all the time for the Sands Motel, same phone number, different state and how many bozos would forget to dial an area code? Hmmm, I'm calling a place in another state, should I bother with those first 3 digits????

janelle
05-16-2003, 01:34 PM
When we moved into our home the telephone company gave us a number and then gave the same number to a restaurant called Brews Brothers. The telephone company told us they had to change our number but we got it first. I called it and found out it was the restaurant. They wanted it since the last numbers spelled out brew. We had to call some people and tell them the new number they gave us but since it was new we didn't have lots of problems with it. I'd hate to have my number given to someone else if I had it for years. Good for Leola. $200,000. Not bad. :p :p