The Arizona Republic

SCOREBOARD

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MESA, AZ – Melissa is survived by her two children Nathan and Ashley, her grandson, her parents Dave and Ida, her sister Catherine and her children, her partner Rene of the last 10 years and her ex-husband Troy whom she was previously married to for 20 Years.

She was born in Des Moines, Iowa and raised in the Independen­ce metro area which she still frequently visited. Melissa relocated to Mesa Arizona with her family after her high school graduation. Melissa was an amazing and kind hearted woman who loved many people and was loved by many. Please feel free to raise of a glass of cold Miller lite or a John Daly in memory of this amazing soul

Dan Soren Schwarz died on February 3, 2021 at Mercy Gilbert Medical Center in Gilbert, Arizona, after battling COVID-19. He was 58.

Dan was born on July 1, 1962 in Northridge, Los Angeles, California, to Richard “Bud” Frederick and Phyllis Eileen Schwarz. He was the youngest of five sons. Dan graduated from Grover Cleveland High School in Reseda, California, in 1980, where he played football, ran track, and was on the Homecoming court. Dan was an Eagle Scout. He served a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Boise, Idaho from 1981 to 1983 and was an assistant to President John Carmack. In a message to Dan’s family, Carmack wrote that he was “deeply impressed with Dan from the moment of arrival, and he never let us down.” Dan graduated from Brigham Young University in 1988 with a Bachelor of Science in financial planning.

Dan met Joan Leslie Bracken, the love of his life and wife of 36 years, while at Brigham Young University. He sat behind her in room 321 of the Thomas L. Martin Building, or MARB, during the first day of class. He introduced himself by asking, “Would you like a stick of gum?,” and she accepted. They married in the Mesa, Arizona Temple on December 15, 1984 and had nine children. In a book commemorat­ing their 25th wedding anniversar­y, Dan wrote that he was immediatel­y impressed by Joan’s beauty, and he thought she was bright, outgoing, and kind. Dan would frequently tell his children that Joan was a “fox” and “smoking hot.”

Dan worked profession­ally as a healthcare executive, compliance officer, and sales representa­tive. From ages 10 to 18 he had a morning paper route. After high school, he worked detailing planes at the Van Nuys Airport Jet Center in Los Angeles, including the planes of John Travolta and Wayne Newton. He also detailed cars. Dan won profession­al awards for distinguis­hed service and leadership, including the President’s Achievemen­t Award at Merck in 2004. His career took him and his family to Idaho, Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia, Arkansas, and finally Gilbert, Arizona, where they settled in 1998.

Dan’s first car was a 1972 Chevrolet El Camino. As a father, he maintained the Schwarz family’s fleet of cars. At various times it included an avocado green 1986 Chevrolet El Camino, a 2000 Chevrolet Silverado dubbed “Black Beauty,” a Yukon XL, a Pontiac Bonneville, and four vans. The latest, “Maxivan,” is a 2017 Nissan NV 3500 that seats 12. Dan liked to drive fast. He received at least two speeding tickets in the state of Arizona between 2015 and 2021, according to public records, but not all counties make their records easily available online, and the actual number is higher. He often drove straight through the night when traveling for family vacations to California or Utah, and he stayed awake during the long drives by drinking Diet Coke and eating sunflower seeds.

Dan was a fan of music, especially classic rock. His favorite band was the Rolling Stones, and he saw them live in concert at least six times. Some of his favorite Rolling Stones songs were “Start Me Up,” “Jumpin’ Jack Flash,” “Sympathy for the Devil,” and “Can’t You Hear Me Knockin’.” Dan once snuck into the Oscars. He liked to keep up with current events, and voted in every presidenti­al and midterm election since at least 2000, according to Arizona records. Dan was skilled in the kitchen and known by his family for his pancakes, waffles, grilled cheese sandwiches, Cincinnati chili, and salmon, as well as for the sirloin steak, ribs, and brisket he grilled on his Traeger.

Dan was an anchor in his community. He volunteere­d for his church, serving as a teacher, youth mentor, and high counselor, as well as a member of the Mesquite Ward bishopric and Arkansas Little Rock Mission presidency. He helped put up American flags on national holidays to raise money for his local Boy Scouts troop and chauffeure­d musicians who performed for Gilbert’s Constituti­on Week, including Lee Greenwood and David Archuleta. Dan donated his time and money to Gilbert High School’s cross country, track and field, football, cheerleadi­ng, choir, orchestra, student council, and speech and debate programs, and he served as the Gilbert High School cheer boosters club treasurer. At least one of his children has been enrolled at Gilbert High School for every year but one since 2001, or nearly one-fifth of the school’s 103-year history. There is a brick on Gilbert High School’s campus in his and his family’s names.

Dan was a man among men. In tributes sent by family and friends since his death, Dan was praised for his charisma, strength, and wit. One close family friend called him “the smartest man I know.” Dan saw the best in people and helped them achieve. He loved his family. During a testimony meeting held Sunday at the Gilbert Stake Center, his wife Joan called him “larger than life.”

Dan is survived by his wife Joan; son D. Hunter; son Boston, his wife Ashley, and their children Eve, Bennett, and Clayton; son Parker, his wife Natalie, and their children Bracken and Lynnlee; daughter McCall, her husband Keegan Darby, and their daughter Maeve; daughters Kennedy, Reagan, Britain, and Eden; son Cannon; and brothers Eric, Walter, Gary, and Paul. His legacy is his family, and generation­s will live through Dan.

Dan’s funeral service will be held on Friday, February 12 at 1 p.m. and livestream­ed at https://adt.zoom.us/j/9570047119. Dan will be laid to rest at Gilbert Memorial Park.

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland – British Open organizers said Wednesday they have “cautious optimism” that golf’s oldest major will go ahead at Royal St. George’s in July.

The event was canceled last year – for the first time since 1945 – because of the pandemic, with the R&A pushing its schedule back one year.

That meant the 149th Open would still be held on the links in Sandwich in southeast England this year and R&A chief executive Martin Slumbers said a “rigorous scenario-planning exercise” is underway to ensure it takes place.

When Henry Louis Gates Jr. was naming his upcoming PBS documentar­y on the Black church in America, he and series producer/ director Stacey Holman quibbled over the title.

Gates, host of “Finding Your Roots,” favored lyrics from the 1873 hymn “Blessed Assurance,” while Holman championed “How I Got Over,” a 1951 hymn performed by Mahalia Jackson and Aretha Franklin. His earthly solution? Ask Oprah Winfrey.

“I emailed Oprah. I said, ‘Stacey and I are arguing about this. What do you think?’ One morning, I wake up. I turn my cellphone on and there’s a message. It’s Oprah. And I played it and it was, ‘This is our story, This is our song,’” the Harvard professor and author said, imitating Oprah singing the slightly altered “Blessed Assurance” lyrics during a Television Critics Associatio­n panel last week. “And that was it. The vote had been cast.”

Winfrey is one of many luminaries from the church, politics and entertainm­ent featured in the four-hour documentar­y, “The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song” (Feb. 16-17, 9 EST/PST, check local listings). Others include John Legend, Jennifer Hudson, Yolanda Adams, BeBe Winans, Bishop Michael Curry, Rev. Al Sharpton and

Rev. Raphael Warnock, the newly elected U.S. senator from Georgia.

“The Black Church” explores a bedrock religious institutio­n with cultural and political influence far beyond church walls, dating back to religious roots in Africa that contribute­d to what Gates called “a big religious foundation­al stew.”

Legend, who joined Gates, Adams and Holman on the panel and is an executive producer, connected the message and power of the Black church with what its congregant­s have endured.

“So much of the way we’ve interprete­d the Bible and so much of the way we’ve embraced it has been about the struggle,” said Legend, whose family was deeply involved in the church and its music during his upbringing in Ohio. “In the Old Testament, a lot of the doctrine that we hold onto is that that idea of the Exodus, going to the Promised Land, Moses leading his people to freedom and ‘Let my people go’ – these were the mantras that were part of the freedom movement, both freedom from slavery and freedom from Jim Crow.”

The documentar­y, which delves deeply into music, notes flaws in the church, including a male-dominated leadership presiding over a largely female membership and a history of homophobia, Gates said. However, the project mostly celebrates an institutio­n that remains relevant, he said, describing his experience­s at a chapel on Martha’s Vineyard as “a circle of warmth.”

 ?? PAUL CHIASSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP ?? Maple Leafs goaltender Frederik Andersen makes a save against the Canadiens’ Tyler Toffoli on Wednesday.
PAUL CHIASSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP Maple Leafs goaltender Frederik Andersen makes a save against the Canadiens’ Tyler Toffoli on Wednesday.
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