Hi Everyone --

I'm looking for one of Al Jolson's early Columbia records -- Columbia #
A1621. One side is "Revival Day". The other side is "Back To The Carolina
You Love".  If anyone has one in good condition that they'd like to part
with, please just contact me off list.

Thanks!

Merle
From [email protected]  Sun Jul 24 16:58:25 2005
From: [email protected] (john robles)
Date: Sun Dec 24 13:10:55 2006
Subject: [Phono-L] The rip-off age?
In-Reply-To: <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>

Alright, now I am sucked in...I had a VW Eurovan, nice car, got it used.  I 
took it to a VW specialist independent shop. All of a sudden, things would 
start going wrong a feww weeks after he had it in there. Problems would 
suddenly appear as he was inspecting it, etc. I suspect now that he would fix 
one problem, then cause another so I would have to bring it back.  I am more 
suspect of independents than of dealers, though dealers gouge on price.

[email protected] wrote:
In a message dated 7/24/2005 12:26:33 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, 
[email protected] writes:

Most of the time you are 
better off avoiding dealers and going to an independent mechanic who often 
has to survive off of his reputation, dealers charge top price for parts and 
service and are often not honest.


This is off-topic, but I cannot let this issue go un addressed. I must 
reluctantly disagree with my good friend, Mr. Medved, on this question. I spent 
(wasted?) 16 years of my life working in factory-authorized car dealerships as 
a parts salesman, and I do not think his comments about independent mechanics 
being more honest than dealership-based ones are fair. I dealt extensively 
with "side-shop," or "shade-tree," mechanics, as well as dealership prima 
donnas who, in some cases, had 6-figure incomes, and all of the latest, special 
factory tools, and up-to-date service bulletins. From my years of dealing with 
auto mechanics of all kinds, on a day-to-day basis, I can state with 
certainty that the majority of them are not very good, wherever they are found, 
and 
almost all of them will "take you for a ride," if they get the chance. 

Also, as cars become ever more sophisticated, the ability of independent 
shops to work on them is hard to maintain. Nowadays, many dealership mechanics 
merely plug a car's main brain box into a factory-supplied computer, which 
spits out a "fault code," that tells the "technician" what the problem is. It 
is 
hard for independent shops to compete with that kind of technology. 

For years after I left the car business, people who found out I had been in 
it would ask me where to take their cars to be serviced. I told them I 
honestly didn't know. I didn't know where to take my own car, much less theirs.

I now live in a rural area, and drive cars we bought from a small, local 
dealership that could not survive if they treated people the way big-city 
dealerships do. The people there have been good to me so far, and I plan to 
stick 
with them.

If you find an "honest mechanic," if that is not an oxymoron, make sure he 
goes for regular physicals.

Randy
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