The centennial Nobel Prize for Peace was awarded to the United Nations and the organization's secretary-general, Kofi Annan
Marion Jones (born October 12, 1975, Los Angeles, California, U.S.) is an American athlete, who, at the 2000 Olympic Games, became the first woman to win five track-and-field medals at a single Olympics.
In 2007, however, she admitted to having used banned substances and subsequently returned the medals. Jones early displayed talent on the track, and her family moved several times during her adolescence so that she could compete on prominent junior-high and high-school teams. By the time she was 12, Jones had begun competing internationally.
She was also an accomplished high-school basketball player, winning Californiaβs Division I Player of the Year award in 1993. She attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill on a basketball scholarship, and in 1994 she helped the womenβs basketball team win the national title. Jones decided to sit out the 1995β96 basketball season in order to focus on track and on the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta.
Through much of her career, Jones was suspected of using steroids. In 2003 a federal investigation into illegal steroid distribution by the Bay Area Laboratory Co-operative (BALCO) led to allegations by BALCO founder Victor Conte and Jonesβs ex-husband, C.J. Hunter, that the sprinter used banned substances. Jones, who had never failed a drug test up to that time, denied the allegations.
The International Olympic Committee officially stripped Jones of her five medals from the Sydney Games the following month. In January 2008 she was sentenced to six months in prison for providing false statements to federal investigators about her steroid use and for her involvement in a check-fraud scheme.
In an attempt to revive her long-dormant basketball career, Jones signed with the Tulsa Shock of the Womenβs National Basketball Association (WNBA) in 2010 but was cut 15 games into the 2011 WNBA season.