Wikipedia:Main Page history/2023 February 16

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Aerial view of Fort Knox
Aerial view of Fort Knox

Goldfinger is the seventh novel in Ian Fleming's James Bond series. First published in 1959, it centres on Bond's investigation into the gold-smuggling activities of Auric Goldfinger, who is suspected of being connected to Soviet counter-intelligence. Bond uncovers Goldfinger's plot involving the gold reserves at Fort Knox (pictured). In Goldfinger, Fleming presents the character of James Bond as a more complex individual than in the previous novels. A theme of Bond as a St George figure is echoed by the fact that Bond is a British Secret Service agent sorting out an American problem. Fleming probably based the gold-obsessed character of Goldfinger on the American gold tycoon Charles W. Engelhard Jr. On its release, the novel went to the top of the best-seller lists. It was adapted as the third James Bond feature film of the Eon Productions series, released in 1964 and starring Sean Connery as Bond. (This article is part of a featured topic: Ian Fleming's James Bond novels and short stories.)

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Title page of the Grammatica Litvanica
Title page of the Grammatica Litvanica

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Cyclone Gabrielle intensifying off the coast of Australia
Cyclone Gabrielle intensifying off the coast of Australia

On this day

February 16: Day of the Shining Star in North Korea; Elizabeth Peratrovich Day in Alaska

Painting of Philadelphia burning by Edward Moran
Painting of Philadelphia burning by Edward Moran
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Vernon Jordan

Vernon Jordan (1935–2021) was an American business executive and civil rights attorney. After growing up in the racially segregated society of the Southern United States, Jordan graduated from DePauw University in Indiana as the only black student in a class of 400. He went on to work for various organizations involved in the civil rights movement, first as a lawyer and then as an activist, before becoming a political advisor to President Bill Clinton in the 1990s. This photograph shows Jordan working on a voter education program in 1967, seated at a desk with a typewriter at the offices of the Southern Regional Council in Atlanta.

Photograph credit: Warren K. Leffler; restored by Adam Cuerden

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