Thomas W. Ross became Davidson’s seventeenth president on August 1, 2007, after three decades of leadership and public service in North Carolina. The Presidential Inauguration will be on October 27, 2007.
Ross was born in Greensboro, North Carolina, where his parents, Charles B. and Mary Brownie Franklin Ross, lived with their four boys. His father worked for Burlington Industries in the hosiery division, while his mother cared for the home. Ross graduated from Davidson in 1972. In the first decade after college, he graduated with honors from the University of North Carolina School of Law, taught at the University's School of Government, joined a Greensboro law firm, and served for one year in Washington, D.C., as chief of staff of a congressional office. In 1984, Governor Jim Hunt appointed Tom Ross as Superior Court Judge—at the time, the youngest in the state. He held the position for seventeen years.  Appointed as the youngest N.C. Superior Court Judge in the state, Ross served 17 years on the bench.
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In his work adjudicating felony cases, Ross became familiar with a state justice system that suffered shortcomings from uneven sentencing and a burgeoning prison population. In 1990, the N.C. Chief Justice appointed him to chair a new Sentencing and Policy Advisory Committee, comprising a twenty-three-member panel of judges, lawyers, legislators, citizens, and law enforcement officers. For two years the panel worked to create a structured sentencing system that was eventually accepted by the legislature and became a model for similar programs nationwide. Over time, the system saved the state hundreds of millions of dollars by prioritizing the use of prison resources without increasing risk to public safety. For his efforts, Ross received the William H. Rehnquist Award for Judicial Excellence from the National Center for State Courts. Chief Justice Rehnquist, now deceased, presented the award personally to Ross in the Great Hall of the Supreme Court. In 1999, North Carolina Chief Justice Burley Mitchell appointed Ross as director of the state’s Administrative Office of the Courts. Soon after, the trustees of the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation invited him to become its executive director. His seven years at the foundation involved him in statewide issues and politics, advocating for legislative reform and creating coalitions of non-profit agencies to increase their influence in public affairs. Tom and Susan Donaldson Ross have been married since 1972 and have two children, Mary Kathryn Elkins and Thomas W. Ross, Jr., both graduates of Davidson College.
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