Your stand on betting is wrong

6/26/2009 3:31 AM

Once again the editorial staff of the Observer-Reporter has disappointed me. After reading your editorial, "Perhaps it's time for table games," I am as mad as I have ever been with your views.

The bill under consideration by the state that would legalize video poker in bars is the "College Tuition Relief Program." Under this program, every family in Pennsylvania with an income of $100,000 or less would receive assistance from the state toward their children's college tuition. Some families would pay as little as $1,000 a year in tuition costs, books included.

There are 17,000 liquor licenses in the state that would be eligible for machines. The money earned by these bars would mean additional employment in their communities; unlike the 80 percent the casinos make in profits that go to the already rich corporations, some of which are soon to be owned by foreign corporations (such as The Meadows).

Get your head out of the sand and support the bill, and find out the facts before you send more business to the big casinos that are already very profitable, and support the bar owners who are hurting during the economic crisis, and the families of Pennsylvania who could use the help in sending their children to college.

Jerry Gona

Canonsburg

Advice to shoppers

Attention, Wal-Mart shoppers. I have a word of advice to the small minority who feel that Wal-Mart's "yield to pedestrians" policy, while very helpful to folks heading into and out of the store, does not apply to any random area within the vast acreage of the parking lot. The crosswalks are the areas located in front of the entrances and are marked by stripes painted onto the pavement. THAT is where drivers are asked to yield to people who are walking.

Unfortunately, there are a few with a special sense of entitlement who feel that it's OK to walk down the center of the driving lanes while chatting with their friends, or calmly strolling across a driving lane - not in the crosswalks - without so much as a glance to see if a car is coming because they are fully convinced that they are firmly within their rights.

Elissa Gooden

Waynesburg

Give me rhubarb

Margie Frank was right to write a letter about rhubarb.

I would sure like to go to the garden and pull up a few sticks of rhubarb, instead of going the store. My friend Jane bought me some for $5 a pound, and it sure was good.

My family about 90 years ago (by the way I am 92) had rhubarb and my mother called it a spring tonic. So just give me a piece of rhubarb pie and a dish of steamed rhubarb and I will be happy.

Noreen Hull

Washington

Fines for signs

Ha! The weekly citations to property owners! Perhaps they work. Perhaps that's when they could get help to move an item to the area for removal.

I see an avenue for revenue they've neglected. Political campaign signs still litter the county. About $25 a day would feed the pig and do it for every election forthcoming.

Sonja L. Parkinson

Prosperity

Memorial is lavish

Your editorial May 24 on the lavish expenditure proposed for the memorial of the Flight 93 crash in Shanksville should be given deep consideration.

Your suggestion seems much wiser.

Madaline Scott

Rices Landing

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