Faculty/Staff Archives - Ă۶ąÖ±˛Ą University /magazine-category/faculty-staff/ Ă۶ąÖ±˛Ą University - Private Christian College in Boiling Springs, North Carolina Wed, 03 Sep 2025 17:35:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2022/04/cropped-favicon-32x32.png Faculty/Staff Archives - Ă۶ąÖ±˛Ą University /magazine-category/faculty-staff/ 32 32 Guiding Generations /magazine/guiding-generations/ Tue, 02 Sep 2025 20:17:42 +0000 /?post_type=magazine&p=34278 Pam Scruggs standing in front of buildingPam Scruggs Reflects on 45 Years of Transformative Service After 45 years of unwavering service, Pam Scruggs retired from Ă۶ąÖ±˛Ą University in spring 2025, leaving behind a profound legacy marked by leadership, mentorship, and steadfast devotion to the student-athletes she served. Honored with emeritus status—a rare and distinguished recognition—Scruggs departs as one of the University’s […]

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Pam Scruggs Reflects on 45 Years of Transformative Service

After 45 years of unwavering service, Pam Scruggs retired from Ă۶ąÖ±˛Ą University in spring 2025, leaving behind a profound legacy marked by leadership, mentorship, and steadfast devotion to the student-athletes she served. Honored with emeritus status—a rare and distinguished recognition—Scruggs departs as one of the University’s longest-serving staff members.

Joining Ă۶ąÖ±˛Ą in 1980 as an administrative assistant to Athletics Director Dan Moore, Scruggs quickly became a cornerstone of the athletics department. Though she briefly stepped away to work in food services, she returned to athletics in the mid-1980s, ultimately rising to associate athletics director and senior women’s administrator. Her impact spanned decades and touched countless lives.

“I always felt like this is where the Lord wanted me to be,” Scruggs reflected. “This is home.”

Over the years, Scruggs became synonymous with Ă۶ąÖ±˛Ą Athletics. Known for her calm demeanor, attention to detail, and remarkable dependability, she was the department’s go-to person. Whether solving complex logistics or offering quiet mentorship, Scruggs’ leadership was felt by student-athletes and colleagues alike.

“Being calm helps,” she said. “Approaching things level-headed lets you handle situations the best way possible. And if you’re going to do something, do it—and do it well.”

Nowhere was her influence more visible than in women’s athletics. As senior women’s administrator, she guided young female athletes through the rigors of sport and scholarship, celebrating their growth on and off the field. “It’s hard to be a student-athlete,” she acknowledged. “But to watch those young women succeed—balancing games, travel, academics—it says a lot about what they’ve learned at Ă۶ąÖ±˛Ą.”

Honored with emeritus status— a rare and distinguished recognition—Scruggs departs as one of the University’s longest-serving staff members.

One former volleyball player stands out in her memory—a student she once feared wouldn’t graduate. “She was headed down the wrong road,” Scruggs recalled. “But I spent time with her, listened. Now she has a family of her own, and her children are preparing for college. That’s the reward—seeing them thrive.”

In 2009, Ă۶ąÖ±˛Ą inducted her into its Athletics Hall of Fame. She also received the Paris Yelton Memorial Award in 2015 for her service to community sports and was named GWU Staff Member of the Year. Perhaps most meaningful is the annual Pam Scruggs Student-Athlete Advisory Committee Leadership Award, given to student-athletes who embody the character and commitment Scruggs exemplified.

Pam Scruggs in building hall

“It’s humbling,” she said. “I hope long after I’m gone, students will see that name and understand how much I loved this place.”

Her relationships with faculty mentors like the late Dr. Barry Hambright and Dr. Tony Eastman inspired her own approach to mentorship. “They left a lasting impression on me,” she shared. “I’ve tried to pass that on.”

One of Scruggs’ proudest memories came during the historic 2022–23 season, when the Ă۶ąÖ±˛Ą women’s basketball team delivered a performance for the ages. The team captured both the Big South Conference regular season and tournament titles, becoming the first basketball team—men’s or women’s—in Big South Conference history to complete league play undefeated. Their dominance extended beyond the record books, earning the team a wave of accolades including Big South Player of the Year, Coach of the Year, and multiple all-conference selections. For Scruggs, the experience was unforgettable. “Maybe because I’m female,” she laughed, “But that moment was glorious. To witness it—just incredible.”

Though officially retired, Scruggs’ legacy continues in the culture she helped shape and the student lives she helped transform. When asked how she’d like to be remembered, she said: “Dependable. Faithful. Encouraging. Grateful.”

For Ă۶ąÖ±˛Ą, Pam Scruggs is all those things—and more.

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The Past Has a Future /magazine/the-past-has-a-future/ Tue, 02 Sep 2025 20:03:27 +0000 /?post_type=magazine&p=34275 Dr. David Yelton with booksEmeritus Recognition Caps Dr. David Yelton’s 35-Year Journey of Scholarship and Service at GWU By Jackie Bridges On the last day of class in History 331, Ă۶ąÖ±˛Ą University professor of history Dr. David Yelton handed each student a thank you note. Mostly history majors, they had given him a retirement party the week before. This […]

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Emeritus Recognition Caps Dr. David Yelton’s 35-Year Journey of Scholarship and Service at GWU

By Jackie Bridges

On the last day of class in History 331, Ă۶ąÖ±˛Ą University professor of history Dr. David Yelton handed each student a thank you note. Mostly history majors, they had given him a retirement party the week before. This gesture spoke volumes about Yelton’s devotion to his students during his 35 years at the University. “I will say that nothing is more meaningful to me as a professor than having a student express their appreciation for my efforts to help them grow in knowledge, ability and confidence,” Yelton shared. “That’s why I’ve spent some 92 semesters in higher education.”

In teaching the value of communication, critical-thinking skills, and researching a question or problem, Yelton was a champion for academic integrity. He played an instrumental role in the creation of the Academic Honesty Policy, helping create a system to track, identify and, as warranted, punish repeat offenders.

At his retirement, Yelton was named professor emeritus of history for his years of service and contributions to Ă۶ąÖ±˛Ą. When the announcement was made, the faculty responded with a standing ovation. “That was as much of a reward that I could have asked for—they were essentially saying you did a good job,” Yelton said. “Coming from your colleagues, it makes all the struggles along the way worth it.”

Yelton, a Rutherford County, N.C., native, applied for a position at Ă۶ąÖ±˛Ą in 1990. A one-year commitment, he was asked to stay when professor Dr. Gil Blackburn moved into administration. Yelton established himself as a faculty leader, serving as coordinator for Secondary Education Social Studies Teacher Licensure from 1992 to 2012, chair of the department from 2002-07, chair of the faculty from 2007-09, and assistant provost for Arts & Sciences from 2016-20. He was also a member of the groups that built the Professional Readiness Experience (PRE) and that established the information literacy requirement.

Yelton’s professor at Appalachian State, Dr. Rennie Brantz, inspired him to become a college professor and further developed his childhood fascination with German history. After earning his bachelor’s in history from Appalachian State, Yelton received his master’s (1985) and Ph.D. (1990) from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He narrowed his focus to examine the citizen militia of Nazi Germany. “I selected it as a dissertation topic because at that time it had never been thoroughly studied,” Yelton offered. “Once I began researching the topic, I found that there had been little work in English on the German perspective of the end of the war.”

Dr. David Yelton speaks in front of class

Yelton is the author of two books, Hitler’s Volkssturm: The Nazi Militia and the Fall of Germany 1944-45 (University Press of Kansas, 2002) and Hitler’s Home Guard: Volkssturmman, Western Front, 1944–1945 (Osprey Publishing, 2006), and in 2020 he received the Vandervort Prize from the Journal of Military History for his article “Older German Officers and National Socialist Activism: Evidence from the German Volkssturm,” published in the April 2019 issue. “To have it recognized as expanding our knowledge of the Third Reich made all the long and tedious hours of research, writing and editing more than worthwhile,” Yelton related. “It’s an affirmation of knowing that your scholarly work is appreciated by your peers and an acknowledgement that your work makes a difference. Vandervort was the editor who approved the draft of this article with the recommendation of several readers, so that adds to the honor.”

Yelton emphasized to his students the value of examining a topic, and knowing how to conduct in-depth research are essential skills that go beyond history majors.

“One of the key things studying history does is to give you a broader perspective of time,” Yelton observed. “American culture is notoriously short-term oriented. Businesspeople always talk about the next quarter. One of the basic skills you need in any profession is to be able to step back from things and have a more strategic longer-term perspective. History forces you into doing that. Everything is connected; history is just a long chain of causes and results.”

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