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the meaning of "unseemly traffic" and "a bookie who worked the college crowd"
What is the meaning of "unseemly traffic" and "a bookie who worked the college crowd" in the following sentences?
Crawford's office was above a bar his brother owned near the campus. It was a nice bar, with a menu and unpainted windows, live music on the weekends, no unseemly traffic other than a bookie who worked the college crowd.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.unseemly traffic - low down people like the japanese yakuza,
so the sentence says that there was no-one the author did not like except one - the bookie = book maker or betting shop owner, who worked the college crowd = he took bets from the students
i am not sure why a book maker for students should be unseemly....
PP
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