A gift of prophecy : the phenomenal Jeane Dixon / [by] Ruth Montgomery.
Material type:
TextPublisher: New York, Morrow, 1965Description: ix, 182 p. 22 cmSubject(s): Dixon, JeaneDDC classification: 133.30924 LOC classification: BF1283.D48 | M6Summary: A Gift of Prophecy tells the story of the extraordinary Jeane Dixon who predicted: the assassination of President John F. Kennedy and the name of his killer; Teddy Kennedy's accident; the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi; Dag Hammarskjold and Carole Lombard's deaths by plane; Marilyn Monroe's suicide; and numerous other events of personal, national and international significance. In the past quarter century, Jeane Dixion has become as much an institution in Washington as the Pentagon. Her amazing ability to see into the future has her constantly beseiged by people anxious to know what the future holds for them. Yet Mrs. Dixon remains an extremely religious woman who uses her gift only for the good of humanity, and continually refuses monetary compensation.
| Item type | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Book | A J M Library 868-5076 | 133.30 MONT (Browse shelf) | Available | 29652 |
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| 133.3 KENN Feng shui for dummies | 133.3 LORI Nostradamus : prophecies for women / | 133.3 Mart Understanding the tarot | 133.30 MONT A gift of prophecy : the phenomenal Jeane Dixon / | 133.3 NOST The complete prophecies of Nostradamus | 133.3 NOST Nostradamus and his prophecies / | 133.3 Ramo The Nostradamus code |
A Gift of Prophecy tells the story of the extraordinary Jeane Dixon who predicted: the assassination of President John F. Kennedy and the name of his killer; Teddy Kennedy's accident; the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi; Dag Hammarskjold and Carole Lombard's deaths by plane; Marilyn Monroe's suicide; and numerous other events of personal, national and international significance. In the past quarter century, Jeane Dixion has become as much an institution in Washington as the Pentagon. Her amazing ability to see into the future has her constantly beseiged by people anxious to know what the future holds for them. Yet Mrs. Dixon remains an extremely religious woman who uses her gift only for the good of humanity, and continually refuses monetary compensation.

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