As Zeno’s owners gather support for the Nov. 4 liquor option, they are also selling the bar.Dick Allen said he and his partner, Chris Miller, have decided to sell the Victorian Village bar because they are tired of fighting with the neighbors.Allen said the idea has been considered since Zeno’s was voted dry in November 1994 by angry neighbors claiming the bar was a nuisance.The seven bars forced by Zeno’s to fight for their liquor license – Adriatico’s Pizza, The Bier Stube, The Cornerstone, Estrada’s, JR Miggs, Maxwells, and Panini’s – aren’t convinced.”I’ll believe it when I see it,” said Greg Fortney, owner of Adriatico’s.Brad Miller, owner of Maxwells, questions why Zeno’s would go up for sale three weeks before the option is put to a vote. “I’m not fooled,” Brad Miller said. “No one would buy it (Zeno’s) without knowing whether they’re going to be wet or dry.”Doug Millsap, owner of The Cornerstone and the Bier Stube, said he is confused about what Zeno’s is trying to sell because the bar can’t serve liquor.”Are they selling the business?” Millsap said, “They don’t have a business.” Fortney said he thinks Zeno’s is trying to drum up support. Millsap agrees.”It doesn’t make sense,” Millsap said. “It sounds like a ploy.”Allen said Zeno’s is still working on trying to get the liquor option passed. He said they have registered 400 people to vote and are encouraging people to support their cause.Brad Miller disagrees. Miller said that Zeno’s did all the work to get the other bars put onto the liquor option, and then left the job of raising support for the issue to them.This year, Zeno’s owners took advantage of a new law that allows two adjacent precincts to be added to the referendum when a neighborhood votes on whether to allow local business to sell liquor. Allen said he and Chris Miller decided to add two campus area precincts, which include the seven bars, on the advice of a political consultant. The two precincts, 40a and 40b, are dominated by student voters, who the consultant advised him were unlikely to vote the area dry. Allen said he knows involving the other bars was not a good move.”It’s not right, but it’s the law we should change,” Allen said.