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Fun Trivia: N : Nobel Prize Winners

Special Sub-Topic: A Few Great Men


Which two men shared the first Nobel Peace prize in 1901?

    Jean Henri Dunant and Frederic Passy. Jean Henri Dunant, Switzerland, was the founder of the International Committee of the Red Cross and initiator of the Geneva Convention. Frederic Passy, France, was the Founder and President of the first French Peace Society.

Three Presidents of the United States have been recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize, two of whom were Presidents Woodrow Wilson and Jimmy Carter. Who was the other U.S. President to receive the Nobel Peace Prize?
    Theodore Roosevelt & Roosevelt. As a consequence of the assassination of President McKinley, he because the youngest President of the U.S. For his efforts in bringing about the Russo-Japanese Treaty, Roosevelt won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1906. He was the first American to win a Nobel Prize in any category.

Who was the only United States Vice-President to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize?
    Charles G. Dawes, III. Charles Dawes, III. was Vice-President under Calvin Coolidge, He was appointed Chairman of the committee of the Allied Reparations Commission, which prepared the 'Dawes Plan'. That document required that Germany pay annual reparations to the Allied nations for World War I. damages. In 1925 he was co-recipients of the Nobel Peace prize, which was shared with Sir Austen Chamberlain, England.

What was the name of the German physician, theologian. missionary, musician and philosopher who was awarded the Nobel Peace prize in 1952?
    Schweitzer & Albert Schweitzer. Albert Schweitzer was truly a great and unique man. He studied medicine and surgery at the University of Strasbourg, became a medical missionary, and established a hospital in Africa. He studied philosophy, wrote several books on this subject and proposed the need for mankind to observe a 'reverence for life'. He was devotedly religious and wrote about the history of Jesus and the mysticism of the Apostle Paul. He studied music and became an authority on the religious nature of the music of Johann Sebastian Bach. In 1918 he was taken to France and when he returned to Africa in 1924, he had to rebuild his hospital. He treated more than 300 patients with Leprosy.

Who received the Nobel Peace prize posthumously?
    Dag Hjalmar Hammarskjold. Hammarskjold was Chief of the Swedish delegation to the U.N. and in April 1953 he was elected secretary general of that organization. He was a very successful mediator and negotiator of international conflicts. He died in a plane crash in September, 1961 and was awarded the Nobel Peace prize posthumously in December, 1961.

Who was called 'The Father of the United Nations'?
    Cordell Hull. Hull was President Franklin Roosevelt's Secretary of State. During World War II he met with the foreign ministers of Great Britain and the USSR to establish post-war conditions for peace. He worked with other nations to establish trade and defense agreements. After the war he was appointed senior adviser for the U.S. delegation to the U.N. Conference on International Organizations. For his efforts in promoting the U.N. he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1945.

Which political adviser to three Presidents of the United States and Secretary of State for two Presidents of the United States was awarded the Nobel Peace prize for establishing a cease fire agreement with Le Duc Tho?
    Kissinger & Henry Kissinger. Henry Kissinger was born in Furth, Germany in 1923 and came to the U.S. in 1938. He was a graduate of Harvard University and later a professor on the Harvard staff. He was a part-time political adviser on foreign policy to Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy and L. B. Johnson. He was Secretary of State under Presidents Nixon and Ford. He was successful in establishing a cease fire agreement during the Vietnam War. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize (shared with Le Duc Tho) in 1973.

Five United States Secretaries of State have been recipients of the Nobel Peace prize. Which of the following was awarded this prize for negotiating the 'Pact of Paris' or more formally known as 'The Treaty for the Renunciation of War'?
    Frank B. Kellogg. Following World War I the international antiwar and disarmament conferences were established in 1920. The Treaty for the Renunciation of war was prepared by Frank Kellogg and Aristide Briand, Foreign Minister of France. That treaty was signed by 15 nations in 1928 and World war I was declared 'the War to end all wars', a declaration which soon proved totally wrong. Never-the-less, Secretary of State Frank Kellogg was the recipient of the 1929 Nobel Peace prize.

Which French-American prolific writer was a prisoner and survivor of the infamous Auschwitz German concentration camp, Chairman of the U.S. President's Commission on the Holocaust, a powerful advocate for human rights and a recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize?
    Elie Wiesel. Wiesel and his family were deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1944. After the war he became a French citizen and attended the University of Paris. When he came to the United States he was appointed professor of humanities at Boston University. In addition to serving on the Commission on the Holocaust, he was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal. For his work in promoting human rights he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986.

Which United States Secretary of State initiated the post World War II European Recovery Program, which more informally bears his name?
    Marshall & George Marshall & George C. Marshall & George C Marshall & George Catlett Marshall. General George C. Marshall served as Army Chief of Staff, military adviser to President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Secretary of State under President Truman. The 'Marshall Plan' was developed to assist the war-torn countries of Europe in their rehabilitation and financial recovery. He was awarded the Nobel Peace prize in 1953.


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