I hate that, too. A few weeks ago, my friend went to Walmart to get an oil change. The 'mechanic' there refused, saying he had to inspect her car first. She asked how much his inspection will cost. He said it depends on what problems he finds. She called me, not knowing what to do, and I told her to leave that Walmart now.
Serling grew up in Binghamton, NY. That area used to get cloud cover so thick that it difussed sunlight to the degree that no shadows were cast. He used outdoor floodlight to get the same effect when filming. (Yes, I lived there. Yes, it is just as creepy in real life as on the show.)
I hate how some of them take advantage of women and try to upsell on uncessary repairs, etc. I take my car to a national oil change franchise. The keep trying to upsell me a battery for $159.00. They say it has 1/4 life left in it according to their battery tester print out. I've kept the receipts of the printouts and even tho some have started to fade they all say 1/4 life. It hasn't changed. Told them I could go to the auto parts store and get one a lot more affordable. Another time the key was stuck in the ignition in my car. The local dealership that sells the brand of my car and a locksmith quoted me prices of $250 to $400 to replace or rekey the ignition. I decided to search for YouTube videos for the problem and found out there is a ring under the gearshift knob that slightly slides up and down when you go from park to reverse or drive. When you shift into drive, that ring keeps you from taking your key out of the ignition. I watched the video on what to do, slid the ring into proper position, put a strip of duct tape on the gear shaft to keep the ring from sliding too far. And voila! Problem solved.
Go the opposite direction. If you went from 97 to 99, that is diluting from 3 to 1, tripling the original weight. So to concentrate it going the original way is a third of the weight (33 1/3 lbs). 90 to 99 would be multiplying by ten, so 99 to 90 is a tenth the weight.
Neat!
Let us see if this link works right.
Yep.
It is almost as if the author used Neatorama as his source material.