Joab L. Thomas | |
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15th President of the Pennsylvania State University |
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In office 1990–1995 |
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Preceded by | Bryce Jordan |
Succeeded by | Graham Spanier |
Chancellor of North Carolina State University |
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In office 1976–1981 |
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President of The University of Alabama |
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In office 1981–1988 |
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Personal details | |
Born |
Holt, Alabama |
February 14, 1933
Died | March 3, 2014 Tuscaloosa, Alabama |
(aged 81)
Alma mater | Harvard University |
Joab Langston Thomas (February 14, 1933 – March 3, 2014) was an American university administrator and scientist, who served as president of Pennsylvania State University, North Carolina State University and The University of Alabama.
Thomas was born in Holt and grew up in Russellville, Alabama. His father, Ralph Cage Thomas, was the town's superintendent of education; his mother, Chamintney Stovall Thomas, was a music teacher. Thomas credits his parents, along with his brother, two sisters and his extended family, for his strong sense of character.
He was educated at Harvard University where he earned bachelors, masters, and doctoral degrees in biological sciences with a concentration in botany.
He served as a professor of biology at The University of Alabama from 1961 until his subsequent appointment as assistant dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, followed by his appointment as vice president for student affairs in 1969.
Thomas took the position of chancellor at North Carolina State University in 1976; he was the school's ninth chief executive. While in office, enrollment at the university grew by 25 percent and surpassed 20,000 for the first time. He oversaw the establishment of the School of Veterinary Medicine, the Center for Economic and Business Studies, the North Carolina Japan Center, and the Caldwell Fellows scholarship program. Thomas resigned as chancellor in 1981. A partial manuscript collection related to Joab Langston Thomas is housed in the NCSU Libraries Special Collections Research Center in D.H. Hill Library.
In 1981 Thomas returned to The University of Alabama to serve as the school's president, an office he held until 1988. During his presidency, the university tripled research funding, raised admission standards, established a core curriculum and a University-wide honors program, and initiated the Presidential Scholars program to recruit top students. He also helped develop the UA Arboretum and served as its second director. A notable hire of his presidency at Alabama was that of Ray Perkins to succeed Bear Bryant as the school's football coach in December 1982. Thomas later hired Bill Curry to succeed Perkins in 1987 when Perkins left to become coach of the National Football League's Tampa Bay Buccaneers.