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carson
The skipping CD Mark Unseen   Nov 4 01:14 UTC 1994

You loan a friend one of your favorite CDs. When it is returned
to you, you listen to it and find all sorts of skips that were
not there before you had lent it.

Do you mention this to your friend?
15 responses total.
batty
response 1 of 15: Mark Unseen   Nov 4 02:33 UTC 1994

Are you very close to this friend?

Carson, did you go to Pioneer?  I know that name sounds vaguely familiar.
brighn
response 2 of 15: Mark Unseen   Nov 4 04:45 UTC 1994

No, but I'd be cautious about loaning things to this friend again.
aruba
response 3 of 15: Mark Unseen   Nov 4 14:03 UTC 1994

I might try washing it with soap and water to see if it's just dirty.
I think if that doesn't work, I would mention it to my friend (hopefully
in a tactful way; like, "Did that CD skip when you played it?") - ther
might be something really wrong with his/her CD player.
socatoa
response 4 of 15: Mark Unseen   Nov 4 17:38 UTC 1994

i would politely ask if they knew what had happened and go from there.
remmers
response 5 of 15: Mark Unseen   Nov 4 23:30 UTC 1994

That's what I'd do too.
carolyn
response 6 of 15: Mark Unseen   Nov 11 17:27 UTC 1994

I would probably follow the same course s aruba (and vow secretly
never to lend that friend another CD).
carson
response 7 of 15: Mark Unseen   Jan 13 04:30 UTC 1995

re #1: yes, I did. you did too. ;)
apollo
response 8 of 15: Mark Unseen   Jan 19 06:41 UTC 1995

Darned right I'd say something....I'd say "Hey, dude...what's up with
this CD?" :(
fraizer
response 9 of 15: Mark Unseen   Feb 6 23:50 UTC 1995

I would calmly say "AaaaGggGhHHHhhmyCDaaaGGaaAgHHwhatGGaahrRhappenedHgg?
nephi
response 10 of 15: Mark Unseen   Mar 11 06:38 UTC 1995

I have a Yamaha CD player, so I usually don't have to worry about it.  If 
someone did return my CD so that it skipped, I would take a course paper
towel, and rub the scratch out of the plastic.  (It's worked every time
so far!)  I would then proceed to really castigate the person for being 
so inconsiderate with something that I was kind enough to loan him.  I 
would be extremely hesitant about loaning him things again.  
simcha
response 11 of 15: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 15:19 UTC 1995

No, and I'd never loan that persn anything at all.
But I never lend out things I care about getting back in the original
condition.  Friendships aren't worth it.  Accidents happen,
so why get pissed at a friend.
nephi
response 12 of 15: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 23:33 UTC 1995

"Friends aren't worth it"?  I would proffer that friends are always 
worth more that material things.
popcorn
response 13 of 15: Mark Unseen   Mar 15 21:20 UTC 1995

This response has been erased.

simcha
response 14 of 15: Mark Unseen   Mar 20 16:43 UTC 1995

Actually I agree w/nephi.  I intended my comment to mean friendships
are too valuable to disrupt because of different attitudes toward
material objects.
I have never eaten or drunk anything in one of our cars.  I would not loan
it out to someone who might stop for a big mac and get special sauce all
over my seat--I'd be upset looking at the stain forever, and couldn't
ask a friend to re-upholster it.   (But I'd loan a different
one to the friend). 
I have a book that was autographed by the author...I have a friend whom I
love dearly but has forgotten to return other books to me.  I wouldn't
hurt her feelings by saying anything directly, but I would not loan my
irreplaceable autographed copy to the friend.  We'd be sure to get into a
fight, and I'd have to accept the material loss of something I valued to
keep the friend.  That would not contribute to a healthy relationship. 
Guess I should have said loss of friendship isn't worth it. 

ewhisam
response 15 of 15: Mark Unseen   Dec 28 03:27 UTC 1995

Yes and stop the lending perhaps if people dont treat your things as they
would their own or........ perhaps they do.
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