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A couple in South Carolina stuck a
Post-it® Note to
their door in 1989 when they had a new baby in the house.
The note, which read "Baby Sleeping," was intended
to keep people from ringing the doorbell during nap time.
After using the note for several months, the family had
to suddenly evacuate their home due to Hurricane Hugo. When
they left, the note was stuck outside of the door. Funny
thing was, when they returned home three days later, the
note was still there — a little faded, but still hanging
on. The 140-mile winds took down eight oak trees in the
family's yard, but they couldn't take down the Post-it®
Note!
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When his wife neglected to check the
pockets of his jacket before throwing it in the washing
machine, this Post-it® Note fan was disappointed to
find that a full pad of notes had just been put through
the spin cycle. Being the thrifty sort, he allowed the pad
to air-dry — only to find that the majority of the
notes dried out and worked just fine.
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When the floods of 1997 hit Grand
Forks, North Dakota, families had to be evacuated from their
homes as dikes failed to hold back the waters. As one man
evacuated his family, he placed a Post-it® Note on his
patio door to alert city workers that the house's natural
gas had already been turned off. Returning to his home weeks
later, the man found that his deck was in his neighbor's
yard. Furniture inside the house had been recklessly rearranged
by the receding waters. But the Post-it® Note? It remained
exactly where he'd left it.
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When this 47-year-old bachelor from
Albert Lea, Minn., cleaned out his freezer in September
of 1999, he came across some meatloaf from New Year's Eve,
1997. How did he know? The Post-it® Note he'd stuck
to the container was still attached! In fact, the note remained
attached even after he removed the container from his dishwasher
the next day. The message was a little faded, but the note
was intact. And the worked just like it was supposed
to.
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