Bring a Friend and Save!
Register with a friend and
the 2nd ticket is 1/2 price!
In Recognition of Angel Awareness Day
The Angel Museum Presents…
Angel Communication Workshop
With Spiritual Life Coach, Lori Daniel Falk
Sunday, October 11th, 1:00 - 4:00 p.m.
Literally thousands of people around the world, just like you, have learned to talk with their angels. This exciting seminar will teach you the basics of how to access your angels to request assistance in solving problems, receiving and interpreting inspirational messages, and providing love and support to you and your family in your everyday life.
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You are invited to join us for this workshop of angelic communication designed to help you reconnect with these benevolent beings. This exciting seminar is structured with a perfect blend of information sharing and experiential activity. In addition to learning more about your angels, you will participate in a number of powerful, heart-felt processes that will actually connect you with your own angels and the wisdom they so want to share with you.
Message from the Angels . . .
“We aren’t that difficult to hear, if you will listen for us with an open heart. Most of the time, we are closer to you than you can imagine. A whisper, a thought, is the only signal we need from you to get a conversation started. We have enormous respect for what you are going through here on planet Earth at this time. We never seek to interfere with your lives, only to bring you blessings of insight and new ways of looking at yourselves.” — channeled by Doreen Virtue, Ph.D., author of the book Divine Guidance
Program Cost: $50 … Early Bird Special … Only $40 with paid registration by 10/02/2009
To reserve your seat call: 608.362.9099 • www.angelmuseum.org
Register Early … Limited Seating Available
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Bring a Friend and Save!
Register with a friend and
the 2nd ticket is 1/2 price!
An evening to stir your soul.
Sunday, October 11, 2009, 6 - 8 p.m.
Join these two amazing artists as they combine their talents to create a mystical evening that stirs your soul.
Grammy Award Winning Producer and Sound Healer, Barry Goldstein.
Barry combines sacred music similar to his sound healing series “Ambiology” in addition to using guided visualizations to center the audience. Barry also shares songs from “The Moment”, “There’s an Angel Watching You” and more! You can sample some of Barry’s music at CD Baby.
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Mystical Artist, Lori Daniel Falk
Lori attunes with the angelic realm and creates an Angelic Message Portrait ™ targeted specifically for those who are gathered. Watch the colors and images evolve while being serenaded by Barry’s moving renditions and enjoy a beautiful heart opening evening! Limited edition prints of the evening’s portrait will be available to purchase for audience members.
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Sunday, October 11, 2009, 6 - 8 p.m.
Artists Reception Immediately Following Concert
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The Angel Musuem
656 Pleasant Street, Beloit, WI
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Concert Ticket Price: $50 …
Early Bird Special … Only $40 with paid registration by 10/02/2009
To reserve your seat call: 608.362.9099 • www.angelmuseum.org
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Register Early … Limited Seating Available
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About the Artists
Barry Goldstein
A Grammy Award-Winning Producer who’s musical experience spans many styles and genres from winning a Grammy with Les Paul for Best Rock Instrumental in 2005, to providing ambient music for Shirley MacLaine. Barry has composed for NBC, ABC, Fox and Lifetime Networks as well as being an award winning composer for film. He has produced music for EMI, Polygram, Atlantic, BMG and many other major record labels and has worked with some of the hottest studio musicians in the industry! Barry believes strongly in the healing aspects of music and is a translator of Sacred Sound and Inspirational Song. His passion is sharing music, or as he calls it, “The Universal Language of Love” with the world. Barry has shared music from his critically-acclaimed series “Ambiology” and his inspirational album “The Moment” with audiences worldwide. He has opened up and shared space with New York Times Best-Selling Authors Deepak Chopra, Wayne Dyer, and Gregg Braden and has touched the audiences of Marianne Williamson, Neale Donald Walsh, and Dr. Michael Bernard Beckwith.
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Lori Daniel Falk
Referred to as everything from a savvy businesswoman and Spiritual Life Coach, to a Celestial Networker and Visionary Artist. As a Celestial Networker, Lori channels a Divine team of angels; as a Visionary Artist she creates angelic drawings that bring a feeling of wonderment and profound healing to all who view them; and as Spiritual Life Coach she helps individuals find their life purpose by exploring the world of endless possibilities. As a businesswoman, Ms. Falk is founder of the Crystalline Institute; and organization designed to bring spirituality into the everyday life. Lori is also a spiritual teacher presenting classes and workshops across the country. The Angelic Message Portraits (TM) Lorico-creates with the angels have graced the covers of numerous magazines and have found homes in over fourteen countries around the world. Her recent book, What the World Needs to Know NOW, Wisdom of the Angels is currently available at the Crystalline Institute.
Museum idea may be blessing for old church
By Kathleen Ostrander - Sentinel correspondent
Beloit - Angels brought an early Christmas present to a group of Beloit residents trying to save a historic Catholic church from demolition.
St. Paul’s Church on Riverside Drive was built in 1914 and recognized in April as one of the city’s historic landmarks.
The building is slated for demolition, but some residents have proposed using it to house a one-of-a-kind museum for an internationally recognized collection of angels and angel memorabilia owned by Joyce and Lowell Berg of Beloit.
The Beloit City Council Monday unanimously backed an initial feasibility study for the museum.
“We were just absolutely thrilled,” Barbara Pellegrini, a member of the four-person citizen feasibility study team, said Tuesday.
“We were surprised because we thought we wouldn’t hear anything for another 30 days — until the council’s next meeting. This truly was a wonderful Christmas present.”
The feasibility study was the first step in establishing the museum. A site study committee will be appointed to determine the exact cost of the museum, which has been estimated as $286,00.
The committee also will look for funding sources, including grants, Pellegrini said.
She said she already has received call from people wanting to volunteer their labor, which will cut the original cost estimates, as well as calls from people volunteering landscaping and marketing skills.
“We are really excited about this. I have to say, ever since the diocese closed the church, we’ve been hoping to find something to do with it,” said Patricia Casucci, another member of the feasibility study team. The diocese closed the church in 1988.
St. Paul’s was established by the Catholic Diocese in 1913 to serve the needs of Italian-speaking immigrants in the city, but the historic building is in the middle of a planned park by Beloit 2000. Beloit 2000, a public-private development group, bought the church and wented it torn down to make was for Heritage Park on the river.
Citizens circulated petitions and won a temporary reprieve. Theyh were asking to develop a profitable option for the building that would fit into the Beloit 2000 development plan.
The Bergs suggested the church would be the logical place to display their renowned angel collection and create the world’s first angel museum. The collection had been featured in national and international publication and contains 10,928 artifacts.
Casucci and other study team members researched other museums, the potential tourist draw of the proposed angel museum, whether or not the museum fit into the Heritage Park theme and estimated costs.
“I like history, and I like to save lovely old buildings. I feel this museum idea will really boost tourism, and it is so near the downtown it would be logical people would be going there and it would boost business there,” Casucci said.
Beloit City Manager Daniel T. Kelley said he thought the feasibility team put together a very comprehensive, professional study of the idea.
Featured Tempo Road Trip
Another in our summer-long series of stories on places, characters and other curiosities in the Midwest.
By Patrice M. Jones - Tribune staff reporter
Beloit Wis. - Joyce Berg likes to say the angels saved the old St. Paul’s Catholic Church building from demolition.
Well, in fact, they did. At least indirectly.
The church closed in 1988, and the building changed hands a couple of times before former parishioners got wind of a redevelopment plan that meant tearing down St. Paul’s
Meanwhile, Berg, a longtime local resident, was looking for a way to establish a museum to house her massive collection of angel figurines. the church, she thought, would be perfect.
The church closed in 1988, and the building changed hands a couple of times before former parishioners got wind of a redevelopment plan that meant tearing down St. Paul’s
Meanwhile, Berg, a longtime local resident, was looking for a way to establish a museum to house her massive collection of angel figurines. the church, she thought, would be perfect.
Today, the Angel Museum, which espouses no religious ideology, includes more than 12,000 angels of all shapes and sizes, most of them displayed under the former church’s impressive stained-glass windows.
Ber, still a passionate collector, is a 75-year-old grandmother with cheeks as round as ripe peaches. She seems to have a story that accompanies every angel picked up in 30 years of road trips and vacations with her late husband, Lowell.
To say she enjoys her longtime hobby is an understatement: Berg has been known to wear feathery angel wings, her white halo, angel earrings and a choir-type white gown when special visitors drop by the museum. She says more than a few times that she is just an ordinary woman with an unusual calling.
“I don’t want to make myself out to be a saint or something,” says the former elementary school teacher with a little giggle, smoothing her robe. “I just love my angels. They make me feel good.”
The angels - linked to dozens of countries and fashioned in almost every material imaginable - had pretty much taken over the Bergs’ home, lining the walls, hanging from the ceiling. The couple had even taken out windows and doorways to display them.
Word got around that the Bergs would occasionally let visitors in to see the collection, but when a tour operator called one day asking to bring a busload of folks by the couple decided they needed to find a better home for their little charges. Lo and behold, St. Paul’s was set for demolition. The Bergs quickly got together with former parishioners and other…














