|

|
A
native of Kenton in Obion County, Earl Ramer joined the University
of Tennessee faculty in 1944 as an associate professor of
education.
In 1958, Dr. Ramer became a faculty representative on the
UT Athletics Board, and three years later, he became chairman
of that board where he served many years.
Dr. Ramer was appointed UT faculty representative to the NCAA
and served as vice president from 1963 until 1968.
|
|
In 1971
and '72, Ramer became the first and only Tennessean to serve
as President of the NCAA. He was also a member of the SEC
Executive Committee during the years 1962 through 1965 and
was Faculty Representative for Intercollegiate Athletics to
the SEC (where he served as Chairman of the SEC Committee
to Revise its Constitution and By-Laws). In its early years,
Ramer served as Interim Chairman of the College Football Association.
During his NCAA presidency, Ramer invited and hosted, at his
Knoxville home, a visit by John Kelly of Philadelphia (Princess
Grace' s brother), who was then national AAU president, to
negotiate a settlement of conflicts between the NCAA and the
American Athletics Union. It was during his second term as
NCAA president that drug-testing for college athletes was
proposed for regional and national championships.
Dr. Ramer was a professor at UTK for 34 years and was Head
of its Department of Continuing and Higher Education for many
years. The year of his retirement at the UT -UCLA football
game in Neyland Stadium, the UT Marching Band spelled out
"RAMER" on the field at halftime, as he was honored
by various officials and dignitaries.
Upon Ramer's
retirement, former Knoxville News-Sentinel Sports Editor,
Tom Siler, wrote "Earl Ramer wore many hats, but nothing
was more important than trying to help UT coaches keep abreast
of the rules, the tangle of barbwire that is the NCAA."
In his time, Ramer advised and counseled five head coaches
in football alone - Bowden Wyatt, Jim McDonald, Doug Dickey,
Bill Battle and John Majors.
Concluding a long and distinguished career of leadership in
public service to education and intercollegiate athletics,
Dr. Ramer died in 1998 at his home in Nashville.
|