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David M. Britt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Britt circa 1959

David Maxwell Britt[1] (January 3, 1917 – May 5, 2009)[2] was a North Carolina politician and jurist who served as Speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives, as one of the original judges of the North Carolina Court of Appeals, and finally as a justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court. He retired from the bench in 1982.[2]

Born in McDonald, North Carolina, he was the brother of federal judge W. Earl Britt. Britt studied law at Wake Forest University and then passed the bar exam, even though he left law school a few classes short of graduation.

Britt represented Robeson County in the North Carolina House of Representatives from 1958 until 1967, when Gov. Dan K. Moore appointed him to the new Court of Appeals. As a legislator, Britt helped reform the state's judicial system, including creating the state Court of Appeals and state District Courts.

Britt was elected to the state Supreme Court in 1978, succeeding I. Beverly Lake, Sr., and served through 1982.[3] He then joined the Raleigh law firm of Bailey & Dixon.[4]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • ”I’m still in shock. This is so great.” May-Britt Moser on being awarded the 2014 Nobel Prize

Transcription

Oh hello, this is Adam Smith calling from NobelPrize.org. First of all many congratulations on the award of the Nobel Prize. Thank you, so Göran called me earlier today as you know and I was crying. I was in shock and I'm still in shock. This is so great. Where were you when you received the call? I was in a meeting, so we normally have meetings with the lab on the Monday morning to go through some data and we had such a great discussion. I had another meeting waiting for me so it was in the middle of two meetings and we were discussing the last part of the data, and those data are so exciting. [Laughs] Too many exciting things to deal with at the same time I suppose. [Laughs] The only, only sad thing on a day like this is that Edvard, my husband, is still on a plane. So he doesn't know. It's so frustrating because we can't get in touch with him. That's deeply frustrating, yes. When and where does he land? So he will land in Munich and I think he said around 1 pm. Right. So there'll be a posse of people waiting for him I imagine, perhaps you too. That would be fantastic if there would be people waiting at the airport. He would be in shock. So you are a married couple and it's very unusual for married couples to receive the Nobel Prize. One thinks of the Coris and the Curies, but what's the secret of your partnership? I think it's the secret ... Ask me about the secret of why we could come so far together in science. OK I think that is that we have the same vision. We love to understand and we do that by talking to each other, talking to other people and then try to address the questions that we're interested in, in the best way that we can think of. And to be able to discuss this when you get an idea on the spot instead of plan a meeting in one or two or three weeks, that makes a huge difference. So there's a lovely spontaneity about it. Yeah, and it's so funny because you know we have the Kavli Institute here and we had this meeting with the Kavli Directors and they said "Yah, and then we have to plan all these meetings” and I said "It's easy for us because we can have breakfast meetings almost every day” [Laughs]. And of course when you want to select your colleagues you want to have colleagues who respect you, who you can trust and who will support you and I think that is the clue, isn't it. Exactly. And talking of colleagues you know your co-Laureate John O'Keefe very well. Yeah, that's so fantastic. You know, he was the supervisor of how to start to do these recordings in '95, in the summer of '95. And you've remained close ever since? Yes. I think it's also so extremely important to say that this is an honour for all the people who have supported excellent science in Norway. Of course our group, our family. But also the local people and the politicians and the research council, all have been extremely, extremely supportive to us. And I think it wouldn't have been possible if that wouldn't be the case. That's very nice. And so it's a celebration not just for neuroscience but for Norwegian science today. Absolutely. And also that people trusted us and supported us, it's a celebration of that. Lovely, well, many, many congratulations again and thank you for speaking to us. Thank you so much. Enjoy your day. Thank you. OK, it was nice to talk to you. Nice to talk to you too. Bye!

References

  1. ^ Burley Mitchell (1996-04-22). "Presentation of Britt's Portrait to Supreme Court". Archived from the original on 2009-03-21. Retrieved 2009-05-07.
  2. ^ a b Ovaska, Sarah (2009-05-07). "Britt, shaped N.C.'s court system; dies at 92". The News & Observer.
  3. ^ Staff (2009-05-07). "Robeson native David M. Britt, 92, dies". The Fayetteville Observer. Archived from the original on 2009-05-08. Retrieved 2009-05-07.
  4. ^ Bailey & Dixon: Lawyers Emeritus


This page was last edited on 13 February 2024, at 02:07
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