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Word: mick (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Singer Mick Jagger intones such earthy lyrics...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rock 'n' Roll: The Sound of the Sixties | 5/21/1965 | See Source »

...word for Ginger Coffey, and at a guess most people put him down as a prosperous Irish squire. Most people, more's the pity, are dead wrong. Behind the mighty mustache hides a terrified tyke. Inside the classy tweeds lives a Mick Micawber who can't keep a job, can't feed his family, can't face the comitragic truth about himself. In his careful and intelligent novel, a bestseller in 1960, and now again in the careful and intelligent script he has written for this film, Author Brian Moore describes with horror, humor and humanity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Mick Micawber | 10/2/1964 | See Source »

...Crimson dominated play in the first half as Femi Olunolyo, the Deacons' center half, and Charlie Hubbard, full-back, consistently kept the ball in Eli territory. Yale was able to mount only one serious scoring threat, a breakaway pass late in the half. But Crimson goalie Mick MacDonald deflected a hard short from the Eli attack to preserve Kirkland's lead...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Kirkland Scores 1-0 Soccer Win | 11/23/1963 | See Source »

...Caretaker" the three bodies are two schizophrenic brothers and a bum. The younger brother, Mick (Donald Berry), has given a dilapidated old house to his brother Aston (James Leo Herlihy) so that Aston will have a job: fixing up the house. It is into the small, cluttered garret of this house--Aston's bedroom--that Aston brings a sly, slavering vagrant, Davies (Richard Shepard), for shelter...

Author: By Joel E. Cohen, | Title: The Caretaker | 9/27/1963 | See Source »

Strangely, in the course of the play (though very long, it seems short in this production), Mick remains fixed: passionately protective of his brother, yet reserved to the point of paralysis in his presence; liable to manic outbreaks and attacks on Davies, and prodded by his own dreams of progress. Aston, his brother, also does not change: ever dreamy, ever puttering with broken appliances in the expertly littered set of Bonny Wooldridge, he never raises his voice, never moves suddenly...

Author: By Joel E. Cohen, | Title: The Caretaker | 9/27/1963 | See Source »

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