Nobel Prize history from the year you were born        
      Since 1901, Nobel Prizes have      honored the worlds best and brightest and showcased the work      of brilliant and creative minds, thanks to Swedish      businessman Alfred Nobel, who made his fortune with the      invention of dynamite.    
      The Prize in Physiology or      Medicine often honors those whose discoveries led to medical      breakthroughs, new drug treatments, or a better understanding      of the human body that benefit us all.    
      The Prize in Literature celebrates      those skilled in telling stories, creating poetry, and      translating the human experience into words. The Prizes in      Chemistry and Physics remind most of us how little we      understand of genetics, atomic structures, or the universe      around us, celebrating the scientists who further knowledge.      A later addition to the award roster, the Nobel Memorial      Prize in Economic Sciences is not an original Prize, but was      established by the Central Bank of Sweden in 1968 as a      memorial to Alfred Nobel. It applauds those who can unravel      the mysteries of markets, trade, and money.    
      The Peace Prize celebrates, in      Nobels words, the person who shall have done the most or      the best work for fraternity between nations, the abolition      or reduction of standing armies and for the holding and      promotion of peace congresses, sometimes risking their lives      to do so.    
      So       precious are the awards that the medals of German      physicists Max von Laue and James Franck, stored away for      safekeeping in Copenhagen during World War II, were dissolved      in acid to keep them away from approaching Nazi troops. After      the war, the gold was reconstituted from the acid and recast      into new medals.    
      But Nobel history has not been      entirely noble. In 1939, British Prime Minister Neville      Chamberlain, known for his policy of appeasement toward Nazi      Germany, was nominated for the Peace Prize. In an act of      irony and protest, members of the Swedish Parliament      nominated Adolf Hitler. That nomination was withdrawn.            Some recipients have ordered oppressive crackdowns on      their own people or ignored genocides, either before or after      receiving the Prize. The 1918 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was      given to Germanys       Fritz Haber, who invented a method of producing ammonia      on a large scale, which was helpful in making fertilizer. But      the same chemist helped develop the chlorine gas that was      used as a chemical weapon in World War I.    
      Stacker looked at facts and events      related to the Nobel Prizes each year from 1931 to 2020,      drawing from the Nobel Committees recollections and      announcements, news stories, and historical accounts.    
      Take a look, and see what was      happening with the Nobel Prizes the year you were      born.    
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            Erik Axel Karlfeldt was the first Nobel winner to be      awarded posthumously. The Swedish poet was      alive during the nomination and deliberation process but      died six months before the Literature Prize was announced. As      of 1974, the rules were changed so that awards can only be      given posthumously if the winner dies after the announcement      but before the formal award is bestowed.    
            John Galsworthy, author of The Forsyte Saga, was      awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. The chronicle of      English life became a hugely popular miniseries in 1967            on American public television.    
            Ivan Bunin, the first Russian writer to win the Nobel      Prize in Literature, departed Russia after the 1917      revolution and settled in France as a permanent exile. His      books were banned by Soviet authorities due to his      anti-Bolshevik writing. To accept his Nobel Prize in      Stockholm, Bunin had to travel through Germany, where he was            arrested by the Nazis and falsely accused of smuggling      jewels. The Nazis forced him to drink a bottle of castor oil      before letting him go.    
      Three Americans shared the Nobel      Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their research into      anemia, when the bodys red blood cell count is low.       George Whipple found dogs formed new blood cells by      eating diets of liver, kidney, meat, and apricots, and            George Minot and William Murphy applied those findings to      humans with pernicious anemia. They also delved into the      cause of pernicious anemia: a shortage of vitamin B12.    
      The 1935 Peace Prize was awarded      to       Carl von Ossietzky, a journalist and critic of Nazi      Germany who was being held in a concentration camp. Hitler      would not allow him to accept the prize. He died in 1938 in a      prison hospital. Also in 1935, married couple Frdric      Joliot and Irne Joliot-Curie won the Nobel Prize in      Chemistry.       Joliot-Curie was the daughter of Marie Curie and Pierre      Curie, also Nobel Prize winners.    
            The Norwegian royal family chose not to attend the Nobel      ceremony following the controversial choice of German      pacifist Carl von Ossietzky to win the Peace Prize. Critics      said the prize decision would provoke Germany. The royal      family offered no official explanation for skipping the      ceremony, but it was widely believed that Norway wanted to      distance itself from the prize selection.    
            American physicist Clinton Davisson won the Nobel Prize      partly by accident. When he was testing the hypothetical      relation between particle velocity and wavelength, he      bombarded a nickel block with electrons and measured how they      scattered. But when the nickel was baked at high heat after      accidental contamination, the structure of its atoms changed,      as did the patterns of the electrons, proving the      hypothesis.    
      No Nobel prizes were awarded in      1940 due to World War II. Norway was occupied by German      forces, and Adolf Hitler was angry about the 1936 Peace Prize      awarded to       Carl von Ossietzky, a journalist who disclosed that      Germany had been secretly rearming, a violation of the Treaty      of Versailles that ended World War I. Ossietzky was tried and      convicted of treason.    
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      Not only were       no Nobel Prizes awarded while the world was locked in      war, but a significant brain drain was underway that would      see Europe lose many of its brilliant thinkers. By 1941, a      dozen Nobel-winning scientists had left for England and the      United States, including physicists Niels Bohr, a winner in      1922, Albert Einstein, who won in 1921, and Enrico Fermi, who      won in 1938.    
            Ralph Bunche was principal secretary of the United      Nations Palestine Commission when he was awarded the Peace      Prize for his role in mediating the 1949 cease-fires between      Israel and Arab states after the partition of Palestine.      Bunche, an academic and U.S. State Department advisor, was      the first Black person to receive a Nobel Prize.    
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      The Nobel Memorial Prize in      Economic Sciences was established in 1968 by Sveriges      Riksbank, the central bank of Sweden. It was created to mark      the banks 300th anniversary. The first recipients would be      awarded in 1969.    
      The first Nobel Memorial Prize in      Economic Sciences was shared by Norwegian economist       Ragnar Frisch and Dutch economist       Jan Tinbergen, who helped develop the study of economics      based upon mathematics. Tinbergen created a model of      macroeconomics, placing economic variables in mathematical      relationships to each other. His younger brother,       Nikolaas Tinbergen, was one of three scientists awarded      the 1973 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their      studies of animal behavior, particularly how animals      communicate and care for their young.    
      Swedens       Ulf von Euler discovered the bodys neurotransmitter      norepinephrine, which is involved in the fight-or-flight      process, and was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or      Medicine. His father, Hans von Euler-Chelpin, won the Nobel      Prize in Chemistry in 1929 for his research in the      fermentation of sugar and the enzymes involved in the      process.    
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            Physicist Dennis Gabor won the Nobel Prize in Physics for      inventing the holograph, and German Chancellor Willy Brandt      won the Peace Prize for helping ease relations between East      and West Germany. Under      his administration, West Germany signed a nuclear weapons      non-proliferation treaty, reached a nonviolence deal with the      Soviet Union, and laid the groundwork for making family      visits easier in the divided city of Berlin.    
      In awarding the Prize in      Literature, the Nobel Committee honored German writer            Heinrich Bll, saying his a broad perspective on his      time and a sensitive skill in characterization has      contributed to a renewal of German literature." After World      War II, Bll was part of the Gruppe      47, a number of influential writers who would meet over      the course of three decades as they dealt with the wars      destruction and the aftermath of the Holocaust.    
      In a controversial decision, the            1973 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded jointly to U.S.      Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and Le Duc Tho of North      Vietnam for the Vietnam ceasefire negotiations. But the      North      Vietnamese leader refused to accept the prize, on grounds      that the war was ongoing and the United States violated terms      of the agreement.       Kissinger did not travel to Norway to accept the prize      and said he wanted to return it but was told he could not do      so.    
      Costa Rican President       Oscar Arias Snchez is       credited for his leadership in encouraging five      presidents in Central America to sign a peace agreement      ending the regions civil wars. The      peace plan signed by Costa Rica, Guatemala, El Salvador,      Honduras, and Nicaragua called for human rights safeguards,      free elections, and an end to interference by other      countries.    
      The       winners of the Prize in Physiology or Medicine brought      relief to millions with their drug discoveries. The work of      Sir James Black led to the use of receptor-blocking drugs to      treat heart disease, hypertension, and peptic ulcers, and      collaborators Gertrude Elion and George Hitchings made      discoveries that led to drugs for the treatment of leukemia,      malaria, gout, and herpes virus infections.    
      Myanmars human rights activist      Aung      San Suu Kyi was under house arrest when she was awarded      the Peace Prize. In 2015 she was released and elected to      national office, but she has come under strong criticism for      her countrys treatment of its Muslim      Rohingya minority and its possible genocide. Calls were      made for her Nobel Prize to be revoked, but       the head of the Nobel Foundation said it would not be      withdrawn for events that took place after it was      awarded.    
      South Africa took the spotlight      when the Nobel Peace      Prize was awarded to       Nelson Mandela and Frederik      Willem de Klerk for their roles in ending the apartheid      system of racial separation. Mandela was imprisoned 27 years      for his political activism, and de Klerk, the president of      South Africa, released him in 1990. They went on to work      together to end apartheid and design a new constitution that      allowed universal voting rights, regardless of race.    
      American       John Nash was one of three winners of the Nobel Memorial      Prize in Economic Sciences for his work on game theory.      Nashs struggle with schizophrenia was portrayed in the 2001      Academy Award-winning film A Beautiful Mind, starring      Russell Crowe as the Princeton-educated mathematician. His      work, which became known as the Nash equilibrium, is used in      understanding the processes of chance and      decision-making.    
            Joseph Rotblat, a physicist and longtime opponent of      nuclear weapon development, won the Nobel Peace Prize 50      years after atom bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and      Nagasaki. He withdrew in 1943 from the Manhattan Project,      which was producing nuclear weapons. He worked with the      anti-nuclear       Pugwash movement, a series of conferences with which he      shared the Peace Prize.    
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      Southeast Asias East Timor was      highlighted when the Peace Prize was awarded to Carlos Belo      and Jos Ramos-Horta.       Ramos-Horta was a leader of resistance in East Timor to      the occupation by Indonesia and helped build international      support for self-determination, and Belo,      a Roman Catholic bishop, demanded the United Nations and the      United Nations Commission on Human Rights take notice. The      Peace Prize is considered a major factor in East Timor      achieving independence in 2002.    
      Citing the more than 100 million      anti-personnel landmines estimated to be strewn around the      world, the Nobel Committee gave the Peace Prize to the      International      Campaign to Ban Landmines and to its coordinator Jody      Williams for their accomplishments in banning and clearing      mines. Their work culminated in the United      Nations Mine Ban Convention, adopted in 1997, that      prohibited the stockpiling and use of landmines and required      countries to clear mines.    
      Two political leadersDavid      Trimble and John Humein Northern Ireland shared the Peace      Prize for helping bring about the       Good Friday Agreement that laid out plans for governance      of Northern Ireland. Key to the agreement were the Protestant      Ulster Unionist Party, led by Trimble, and the Catholic      Social Democratic and Labour Party, led by Hume.    
      The Nobel Committee applauded      Mdecins      Sans Frontires, known as Doctors without Borders in      English, for its extensive humanitarian work across several      continents. It said the organization maintained a high degree      of independence, helped build public opinion in opposition to      humanitarian abuses, and helped forge contacts between sides      in conflicts.    
      Understanding our relation to      money earned the Nobel Prize for       two American economists. James Heckman researched factors      that affect statistical sampling, and his findings have been      used to understand how early life experiences influence      earnings potential and economic status. Daniel McFadden      studied how people make decisions, developing so-called            discrete choice models that can explain and predict      behavior and are applied to such real-life uses as public      transportation systems and senior housing.    
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      Americans George Akerlof, Michael      Spence, and Joseph Stiglitz were awarded the       Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics for their work on      markets with asymmetric informationmarkets in which one      side has better information than the other. Akerlof looked at      the consequences of such markets in areas like developing      world lending and medical insurance, Spence demonstrated how      market participants convey information, and Stiglitz showed      how asymmetric markets work in areas like unemployment and      credit.    
      Jimmy      Carter was commended for decades of untiring effort to      find peaceful solutions to international conflicts, to      advance democracy and human rights, and to promote economic      and social development. The       Committee cited his foreign policy achievements including      the Panama Canal treaties, Camp David Middle Eastern accord,      and SALT II treaty with the Soviet Union as well as his      founding afterward of The Carter Center, which specialized in      international conflict mediation and election      monitoring.    
      The creators of magnetic resonance      imagining, or MRI, took home the Nobel      Prize in Physiology or Medicine.       Paul Lauterbur of the United States and Britains            Sir Peter Mansfield researched the behavior of atoms and      molecules in a magnetic field to develop interior imagery of      the human body.    
            Wangari Maathai, the first female professor in Kenya,      became the first African woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize.      Already active in the nations democratic movement, Maathai      launched a grassroots movement that mobilized women to plant      trees to fight deforestation. Called the Green Belt Movement,      it spread elsewhere in Africa and led to the planting of more      than 30 million trees.    
      Winners of the       Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Australians J.      Robin Warren and Barry Marshall discovered the bacterium that      causes gastritis and peptic ulcer disease. Their discovery      ran counter to the commonly held belief that peptic ulcer      disease was caused by lifestyle and stress. The revelation      influenced research into the causes of other chronic      inflammatory conditions and the links between chronic      infection, inflammation, and cancer.    
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      The winner of the Nobel Prize in      Chemistry, American       Roger Kornberg, researched the structure and role of an      enzyme called       RNA polymerase in a genetic process essential to building      and maintaining molecular and cell structure. His father            Arthur Kornberg won the 1959 Prize in Physiology or      Medicine for his pioneering work in genetics.    
      Doris Lessing, author of dozens of      books including the novel The Golden Notebook, became the      oldest      winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature at age 88.      She      told reporters from her doorstep in London that she was      not that surprised because her name had been under      consideration for decades. Either they were going to give it      to me sometime before I popped off or not at all, she      said.    
      The New York Times columnist            Paul Krugman won the Nobel memorial Prize in Economic      Sciences for his work in international trade patterns and      economic geography. Krugman was instrumental in the      development of New Trade Theory, which concerns factors in      international market patterns such as economies of scale and      the network effect, when goods become more valuable with      wider use.    
      U.S. President Barack      Obama was presented the Peace Prize during his first year      in office. The Committee said it recognized Obama for his      "extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy      and cooperation between peoples. Critics      questioned whether Obama, the countrys first Black      president, had earned such a distinction so early in his      term.    
      Chinas Liu      Xiaobo was in prison when he was awarded the Nobel Peace      Prize. The human rights activist had been jailed following      the 1989 massacre at Tiananmen Square, imprisoned again for      criticizing Chinese policies toward Taiwan and the Dalai      Lama, and sentenced to prison again in 2009 for seeking      political reform. He died in 2017.    
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      When the Nobel Prize in Physiology      or Medicine was      announced, the Foundation learned that one of the      winners,       Ralph Steinman, had died three days earlier of cancer.      Although the rules say the awards are not given posthumously,      it was decided that the Canadian immunologist should be a      Nobel Laureate because the Nobel Assembly had announced the      winners without knowing he was dead.    
            Sir John Gurdon of England and       Shinya Yamanaka of Japan, winners of the Nobel Prize in      Physiology or Medicine, researched the way cells and      organisms develop. They discovered how mature specialized      cells could be reprogrammed to become immature cells, a major      medical breakthrough applicable to stem cell research.    
      The       three American economists who shared the Nobel Prize made      discoveries that help predict the long-term prices of stocks      and bonds. Eugene Famas research was used in the development      of stock index funds, Robert Shiller discovered certain      dynamics about stock prices and dividends, and Lars Hansen      looked at theories of risks and returns that are used in      asset pricing.    
      At age 17, Malala Yousafzai was      the youngest Nobel Laureate when she was awarded the 2014      Peace Prize.       Yousafzai, an outspoken advocate for girls education and      rights, survived an attempted assassination in 2012 by the      Taliban in Pakistan. She shared the Peace Prize with Indian      activist       Kailash Satyarthi, who was honored for his work fighting      child labor.    
            Jeffrey Hall, who shared the       2017 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work      understanding the human body clock, had left science about a      decade before winning his prize. He was outspoken about his      frustration with what he saw as an inadequate, wasteful, and      unfair research funding process.    
      At 96 years old, Arthur      Ashkin became the oldest Nobel Laureate until he was      surpassed by a 97-year-old winner the following year. Ashkin      invented optical tweezers, sharp laser beams that can grab      particles, atoms, molecules, and bacteria. The       Nobel Prize in Literature was postponed due to       scandal involving sexual misconduct, conflicts of      interest, and financial malpractice at the Swedish      Academy.    
      At 97, John Goodenough became the      oldest      Nobel Laureate when he won the Prize for Chemistry.       His work led to the development of lithium-ion batteries,      which had higher voltage than previous batteries, and are      used to power mobile telephones and electric cars.    
            The three winners of the Prize in PhysicsBritains Roger      Penrose, Germanys Reinhard Genzel, and       Andrea Ghez of the United Stateswere honored for      research into the existence and formation of black holes in      the Milky Way. Penrose proved how the theory of relativity      leads to the formation of black holes, while Genzel and Ghez      discovered the role of a massive black hole at the center of      the galaxy in affecting the orbits of stars.    
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      Germanys Adolf      Butenandt won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his      research      into sex hormones that would be used in the development      of oral contraception. Like Richard Kuhn in 1938, he was      forced by the Nazis to decline the prize but was able to      accept the certificate and medal in 1949. Germanys      Gerhard Domagk, whose research led to the development of      antibiotics, also had to turn down the Nobel Prize in      Physiology or Medicine but got it after the war.    
      While no Nobel Prizes were      awarded, 1942 was the year that the name United Nations was      coined by President Franklin Roosevelt in a declaration by 26      nations to stand together against the Axis powers. Founded      three years later, the United Nations, along with its      agencies, programs, and staff, has been awarded the Nobel      Peace Prize a dozen times. The U.N.s High Commissioner for      Refugees (UNHCR) has won it twice, and most recently, the      U.N.s World Food Programme won in 2020.    
      Henrik      Dam and Edward Doisy shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology      or Medicine for their work in the discovery of vitamin K,      which the human body uses for clotting and healing. Dam      determined that Vitamin K is needed for blood to coagulate,      and Doisy found ways to produce it artificially, which was      useful in stopping bleeding in small children.    
      The Nobel Peace Prize was awarded      to the International Committee of the Red Cross for the      work      it had done during the war on behalf of humanity. It      was the first Peace Prize bestowed in five years; the prizes      were not given out from 1939, the year Germany invaded Poland      at the start of World War II, to 1943.    
      Two American activists      shared the Nobel Peace Prize. One was Emily Greene Balch,      co-founder of the Womens International League for Peace and      Freedom and a       professor at Wellesley College for 22 years until she was      fired for her activism. John Raleigh Mott, head of the Young      Mens Christian Association, promoted international youth      programs, worked with relief programs for prisoners of war,      and was an outspoken critic of colonial oppression and race      discrimination.    
            Gerty Cori, the first woman to win the Nobel Prize in      Physiology or Medicine, was honored with her husband       Carl Cori for their work in understanding the metabolism      process.       When the couple moved to America in 1922 from Austria,      Carl Cori was hired as a biochemist at a New York research      institute. Gerty Cori could only find work as an assistant      pathologist, despite having the same degrees and research      experience, because she was a woman. She was finally allowed      a position equal with her talent and experience at Washington      University in St. Louis in 1938.    
      Although the Nobel Prize in      Literature is considered to honor a writers body of work,      the Nobel Academy singled out The Old Man and the Sea when      it chose American author       Ernest Hemingway. It said the novel demonstrated his      mastery of the art of narrative.    
      The winner of the Chemistry Prize,            Vincent du Vigneaud, studied biochemical sulphur      compounds, including oxytocin, a hormone involved in sexual      intimacy and reproduction. Sometimes called the cuddle or      love hormone, it is released when people bond, including as      couples or parents with children. Vigneaud isolated oxytocin,      calculated its chemical composition, and determined how to      produce it artificially.    
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      The king of Sweden goodnaturedly      reprimanded       John Bardeen for leaving most of his family homehis      children were in schoolwhen he was awarded the Nobel Prize      in Physics. The American physicist told the king he would      bring his family the next time. Sure enough, Bardeen won a      second Nobel Prize in 1972, and he took his whole family to      theceremony.    
      Biochemists Severo      Ochoa and Arthur Kornbergs work on DNA and RNA earned      them the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Ochoa      discovered how to create RNA, and Kornberg, formerly a      student of Ochoas, found ways of making DNA. Kornbergs son,            Roger, a chemical physicist, also conducted genetic      research and won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2006.    
      Winners of the Nobel Prize in      Physiology or Medicine,       Roger Guillemin and       Andrew Schally used pig brains and lamb brains in their      research on hormonal roles and structure. They shared the      prize with       Rosalyn Yalow, a nuclear physicist who developed      radioimmunoassay, a method that can measure extremely small      amounts of bodily substances. It was used in helping      determine the cause of type 2 diabetes.    
      In awarding the Peace Prize to the            International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear      War, the Nobel       Committee singled out its Soviet founder Yevgeny Chazov      and American founder Bernard Lown to accept the award because      of their cooperative influence. The IPPNW consists of tens of      thousands of medical professionals, now in 64 countries, who      banded together in hopes of preventing and averting nuclear      war.    
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      Indian leader       Mahatma Gandhi was nominated five times for the Nobel      Peace Prize, the final time being in 1948 not long before he      was assassinated. That year, the Nobel Committee chose not to      bestow any award, declaring there was no suitable living      candidate.    
      The winner of the Nobel Prize in      Medicine, Portugals       Egas Moniz, invented the lobotomy. He discovered how a      surgical incision into the brains prefrontal lobe could      alter behavior. Lobotomies were used widely to treat mental      illness in the 1940s and 1950s until they were widely      recognized as dangerous, and medication for mental illness      became more commonly prescribed.    
      The awarding of the Peace Prize to            Dag Hammarskjld, the second Secretary-General of the      United Nations, was only the second time a Nobel was given      posthumously. The first occasion was the posthumous      literature prize awarded to       Erik Axel Karlfeldt in 1931. The rules were changed in      1974 so that prizes could not be awarded posthumously unless      the winner dies after the announcement but before the award      ceremony.    
      The winner of the Nobel Prize in      Physiology or Medicine, to American       James Watson, would later       sell it at auction at Christies in 2014 to raise money      for charity. Russian tycoon Alisher Usmanov paid $4.7      million, then said he was returning the award to the      scientist. Watson won for discovering the structure of DNA      along with       Francis Crick.    
      Free-market       economist Friedrich von Hayek, a critic of central      planning, shared the Nobel Prize with Swedish economist      Gunnar Myrdal.       Hayek argued for a decentralized market system with open      competition and disagreed with the use of government fiscal      policy to moderate movements of the economy as promoted by      economist John Maynard Keynes.    
      American economist Milton Friedman      was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences      for his      work on monetarypolicy. Friedman advocated for free      markets and opposed government economic intervention. His      views influenced the conservative fiscal policies of U.S.      President Ronald Reagan and British Prime Minister Margaret      Thatcher. He was a major proponent of school vouchersusing      public tax funds to pay for students to attend private      schoolsa system that remains hugely controversial to this      day.    
      Mother      Teresa of the Missionaries of Charity was given the Nobel      Peace Prize for her work assisting the poor in Kolkata,      especially its orphans, lepers, and terminally ill. Pope      Francis declared the       Albanian nun a saint in 2016. She started the Missionaries      of Charity with a dozen nuns and it had nearly 5,000 at      the time of her death in 1997.    
      Marking the 500th anniversary of      Christopher Columbus landing in the Americas, Mayan Rigoberta      Mench Tum of Guatemala was hailed for her campaign for      human and Indigenousrights. Taking a global approach,      she facilitated the use of international intermediaries in      negotiations between guerrilla forces and the government,      culminating in a 1996 peace agreement      that ended a 36-year civil war.    
            Max Theiler of South Africa was honored for his research      on yellow fever, a deadly disease found in subtropical and      tropical South America and Africa and spread primarily by      mosquitoes. Theiler discovered how to transmit the yellow      fever virus to mice, helping produce weaker forms of the      virus that could be used as a vaccine for humans.    
      For his role in the discovery of      streptomycin,       Selman Waksman was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology      or Medicine. Streptomycin was the first antibiotic found to      be effective against tuberculosis. Waksman studied how the      bacteria that causes tuberculosis interacted with      microorganisms in soil and found that a bacterium called      Streptomyces griseus blocked its growth.    
      British Prime Minister       Winston Churchill won the Nobel Prize in Literature for      his works that included an autobiography, several volumes      about the First and Second World Wars, and his notable      speeches during World War II. From 1946 to 1953, Churchill      was nominated in seven years for the Literature Prize and      twice for the Nobel Peace Prize.    
      Ending conflict in the Middle East      was the focus of Canadian historian and diplomat       Lester Pearson, who won the Peace Prize for his role in      ending violence that erupted in 1956 over control of the Suez      Canal. The conflict among the major superpowers could have      had severe global consequences. Thanks to Pearsons efforts,      a United Nations Emergency Force was dispatched to oversee a      cease-fire.    
            Russias Boris Pasternak was awarded the       Nobel Prize in Literature, which he at first accepted but      later was forced to turn down by Soviet authorities who      banned his novel Doctor Zhivago. The only novel the poet      wrote, Dr. Zhivago was deemed to be anti-Soviet and      remained forbidden until the late 1980s.    
      Frances Jean-Paul Sartre was      awarded, and declined, the Nobel Prize in      Literature.He      explained that he always declined official honors and      that       as a writer, he felt he should remain distinct from any      institution.    
      The United Nations Childrens      Fund, better known as UNICEF, was awarded the Nobel Peace      Prize. UNICEF      started out in 1946 providing food, clothes, and medicine to      children and mothers but expanded to promote nutrition,      school attendance, and health care in developing countries.      The Nobel Committee honored UNICEF for its effort to enhance      solidarity between nations and reduce the difference between      rich and poor states.    
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      Peyton Rous won the Nobel Prize in      Physiology or Medicine when he was 87, the       oldest winner ever in the category. The American studied      the role of viruses in cancer cells and transmission. His      work was based on research begun in the       early 1910s.    
      Contributions to understanding how      the human eye functions earned the Nobel Prize in Physiology      or Medicine for a scientific trio. Finnish scientist       Ragnar Granit researched the types of cones responsible      for seeing color; American       Keffer Hartline analyzed how the eye processes contrasts;      and American       George Wald studied the role of light in visual      impressions.    
      Danish      physicist Aage Bohr won the Nobel Prize for his      experiments on the structure of atoms. His father, Niels      Bohr, won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1922, also for work      on atomic structure. The elder Bohr created a theory that      explained how moving electrons cause atoms to emit      light.    
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      The Camp David Agreement, which      laid out a framework for peace in the Middle East, earned the      Nobel Peace Prize for Egyptian President       Mohamed Anwar al-Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister            Menachem Begin. U.S. President Jimmy Carter was to have      been a third recipient, but a technicality prevented him from      being nominated within the Committees deadline. But he won      the Peace Prize nevertheless in      2002.    
      Alva      Myrdal, along with Mexicican diplomat Alfonso      Garca Robles, won the Nobel Peace Prize for working      toward nuclear disarmament. Myrdal was a Swedish scientist,      government official, and diplomat, and she was married to            Gunnar Myrdal, a Swedish economist who was awarded an      Economics Nobel in 1974.    
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Nobel Prize history from the year you were born - Herald & Review