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Do you have a mechanic you go to that you trust. If so, have him/her check your problems out and recommend what's needed on paper. You could also go to a Toyota dealer and have them inspect the car, but do no work--basically get an estimate for the work. Be sure to let them know you want NO work done. Then bring the report back to the used car manager where you bought the car and request those things be fixed.
Did the Used Car place where you bought it give you any kind of warranty, like a 30 day warranty? Depending on what it says, you could threaten to back out of the deal if he doesn't fix the problems. That might be enough incentive for him to fix the problems.
For the brakes, it's always best if you could get new rotors replaced for free. However, if they haven't been turned before, then they probably could be surfaced. Surfacing the rotors is perfectly acceptable, but the next time you have to do your brakes in 50,000 miles or so, you'd likely have to replace the rotors then.
For the struts, again, what kind of warranty. If the car was sold "as is" then he really doesn't have to do anything. But it sounds like he's trying to address the problems you've brought up.
For the vibration felt in the accelerator pedal, does the engine vibrate at slow RPM's? That could indicate it needs a tune-up (plugs, filters, etc.)
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