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  1. Ranked fifth in the MAC with a .489 field goal percentage. Averaged a team-best 4.4 assists per game, ranking fifth in the league. Scored in double digits in 20 games. MAC West Player of the Week (Feb. 5) Posted double-double with 15 points and a season-high 10 assists in her first collegiate game, versus Green Bay.

  2. Mary "Moll" Davis (ca. 1648 - 1708) was a seventeenth-century entertainer and courtesan, singer and actress who became one of the many mistresses of King Charles II of England. Davis was born around 1648 in Westminster and was said by Samuel Pepys, the famous diarist, to be "a bastard of Collonell Howard, my Lord Barkeshire" - probably meaning Thomas Howard, third Earl of Berkshire.[1] During ...

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  3. Around 1648 Mary "Moll" Davis Actor was born illegitimately to Thomas Howard 3rd Earl Berkshire 1619-1706 (age 28). She may possibly have been a daughter of his older brother Charles Howard 2nd Earl Berkshire (age 33). Around 1655 Peter Lely (age 36). Portrait of Mary "Moll" Davis Actor (age 7).

  4. Moll Davis. Moll Davis, Sir Peter Lelyn maalaus, noin vuodelta 1665. Moll Davis, alkuperäiseltä nimeltään Mary Davis tai Mary Davys (noin 1648 tai 1651 - 1708) oli englantilainen näyttelijä, laulaja, kurtisaani ja kuningas Kaarle II :n rakastajatar. Davisin elämästä tiedetään lähinnä Samuel Pepysin päiväkirjojen ansiosta.

  5. Moll Davis (c. 1650-1708) joined the Duke’s Theatre Company managed by William Davenant in the early 1660s, quickly becoming popular for her singing, dancing, and acting. She had at least nine named roles during her tenure, but the one that purportedly changed her life was Celania, the mad shepherdess in Davenant’s 1664 The Rivals.

  6. Mrs Moll Davis (1640–c.1721), Actress and Mistress of Charles II Lely, Peter, 1618–1680 Weston Park Photo credit: Trustees of ...

  7. A mezzotint of Mary Davis playing a guitar, after a portrait by Sir Peter Lely: three-quarter length, seated; her body is turned to the front and her head is turned slightly to the right. Her hair is in short curls, and she wears a loose gown, cut low. Drapery hangs behind her on the left, and on the right is a column and a vase of flowers.Mary Moll Davis (c.1651-1708) came to Charles IIs ...