
Ruth M. Berkey, Occidental鈥檚 director of athletics from 1977 to 1980 and a pioneering advocate for women鈥檚 sports, died May 18, 2025, in Grants Pass, Ore. She was 89.
A native of Beverly, Mass., Ruth Margaret Anderson received her B.S. in physical education and kinesiology from Pepperdine College in 1957 and completed a master鈥檚 in physical education at USC in 1959. Ruth married Bruce E. Berkey in 1960 and the couple settled in Sierra Madre.
After teaching at John Marshall Junior High School in Pasadena, Ruth joined Occidental as an instructor in physical education in 1960. At the time, women鈥檚 athletics at Occidental consisted of intramural competition in basketball, swimming, tennis, and volleyball. 鈥淭hat wasn鈥檛 a program鈥攖hat was a joke,鈥 she recalled in a 1978 interview in The Occidental newspaper.

Ruth coached numerous women鈥檚 sports at 色情视频, including tennis, water polo, archery, badminton, and field hockey. Her true passion was in coaching basketball and volleyball, and she led those teams to several conference championships. She coached the women鈥檚 volleyball team to consecutive appearances in the AIAW National Small College Volleyball tournament in 1977 and 1978, finishing sixth in 1977. (She also recruited much of the 1981 women鈥檚 volleyball team coached by Lesley Alward 鈥75 to a third-place finish in the NCAA Division III championships.)
In addition to teaching and coaching, Ruth served as dean of women from 1965 to 1968 and succeeded Roy Dennis 鈥33 as Occidental鈥檚 director of athletics in 1977鈥攐ne of the first women in the country to oversee both men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 sports at the collegiate level.
Following the passage of Title IX in 1972, Ruth seized the opportunity to fight for equal standing for women in college sports. Her skilled advocacy and leadership did not go unnoticed. In 1980, she left Occidental to establish the NCAA鈥檚 first women鈥檚 championship program for Divisions I, II, and III鈥攁n ambitious and historic task. By 1982, all three divisions offered national championship events for women鈥檚 athletics.
鈥淲omen have always had a problem in athletics,鈥 Berkey told The New York Times in January 1981. 鈥淲omen athletes are not accepted as women because they are athletes and thought to be unfeminine. They are not accepted as athletes because they are women. The NCAA is accepting them as both.鈥
Working out of NCAA鈥檚 then-headquarters in Mission, Kan., Ruth eventually became the assistant executive director of the NCAA, where she remained until 1992. Her contribution to women鈥檚 athletics was recognized when she received the 2002 Honda Award for Outstanding Achievement in Women鈥檚 Collegiate Athletics.
In 2008, Ruth moved to Grants Pass to be close to her family. She was an avid (and competitive) tennis player throughout her life and in her retirement served as the girls tennis coach at Hidden Valley High School and president of the Grants Pass Community Tennis Association for several years.
Ruth is survived by sons Bruce R. Berkey '84 and James F. Berkey; seven grandchildren; one great grandchild; and her brother, Bob Anderson.
Top photo: From left, women's volleyball players Yela Luzar 鈥79, Sue Bethanis 鈥82, Coach Ruth Berkey, Ann Easley 鈥81, and Camille Hamner 鈥79 in 1978.