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Word: illicitness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Every once in a while a murder is committed that unites in one "news story" all the sleeping romantic fancies of human nature. Such a murder is the Dorothy King case. It has love (and illicit love-which is always more fascinating), riches, social prestige, an underworld motif, intrigue and violence. It appeals to snobbery, outraged morality, pity, terror and man's appetite for the human hunt. Thousands of plain people, reading the lurid three-page account in the Hearst press, can imagine themselves either the beautiful Broadway butterfly, Dorothy King; the rich and socially prominent "angel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: News Value of Murder | 3/31/1923 | See Source »

This fleet is said to be terrorized by a rum pirate called the Gray Ghost, a big steel trawler, which raids the rum ships and steals their cargoes. Being engaged in illicit trade themselves they are afraid to appeal to the United States or to the British Government, whose flag they usually fly for protection...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: More Rum Fleets | 3/24/1923 | See Source »

...From my personal observation I know that the violation of the law has increased a great deal since last year. I do not attribute this, however, to a more widespread disrespect for the law, but to the fact that the illicit liquor business has just become well organized. It took this trade a long time to get under way after the act was first passed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PREDICTS INCREASE OF VOLSTEAD VIOLATIONS IN NEXT FIVE YEARS | 12/9/1922 | See Source »

...These mangled dramas are thrilling and horrible to an unusual degree. But beside being selected from a very special field of the drama of Japan, they give a very unfair picture of oriental life. In each of the five plays the prime minister is dissolute, carrying on an illicit and brutal love affair with a Gelsha girl: In no one of them does the scene get far away from the parlor of a Gelsha house. Mr. Duran, with a literary cruelty seldom seen before, has represented as typical of the "Plays of Old Japan" a special type of drama, which...

Author: By J. H. K., | Title: THE CRIMSON BOOKSHELF REVIEWS | 1/13/1922 | See Source »

...question arises whether the condition can be corrected with new legislation. Is this the real crisis of the amendment, or is it merely an unavoidable halting point in the adjustment of the law to the situation? Does the illicit sale and wide-spread use of spirits prove that national prohibition is something which the people will not have, and that it will be necessary to repeal the amendment? There are many who think so, but in view of the way in which prohibition swept the country, with an almost unanimous ratification by the States, it should be evident that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMENT | 6/10/1921 | See Source »

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