Last Days


Wally lived his last days with Alzheimer's. Though his ability to remember yesterday was limited, he relished the present.
In 2005 he visited his daughter Sandra at her home in Punta Banda, Mexico. Their small house on a narrow sand spit is sandwiched between the Bay of Todos Los Santos and a large estuary. Ocean waves whisper good night and greet the morning dawn with an ever changing palette of colors, clouds, sand, birds and people.

Wally asked to spend his last days there "on the beach".

And he did.


Trip To Pierre Marquete

Wally loved to go for a drive. In his last years it didn't matter where he went. Just to get out and see the trees wave, the river dance and be with friends or family brought him great joy.

The May 2007 trip from St. Louis where he was living in an assisted living home, north to Illinois had no agenda or special route. It was the discovery of twisty back roads, the passing of the river, sleepy green islands and being present that made the day special.


Eastern Sierras to Yosemite Valley 2004



Thoughts From Angie of Parc Provence


..........your father always had/will have a special place in my heart. We absolutely LOVED the blog - what a great way to pay tribute to your father. It brought tears to many eyes, including mine, as we showed it around to the managers and staff. We are all so happy that he
was able to live out his last days the way he did. You and your sisters could not have done a more honorable thing for Wally than letting him live as independently as possible. I hope my kids do that for me someday! :-)

Anyway, here's a photo I found of Wally catching a fish on one of our outings. I know you have the picture of us at the baseball game...unfortunately, I couldn't locate it at home electronically.

Please know that your father (and his brilliant smile) will always be remembered by me and here at Parc Provence. I really appreciate you taking the time to keep in touch and share his blog. If you ever need anything else, please let me know.

Take care,
Angela J. Keeven, MSW
Parc Provence
Director of Resident Well-Being, Social Services
St. Louis, MO 63141
Direct: (314) 453-7305
Email: akeeven@parcprovence.com

Parc Provence is an assisted living and skilled nursing community specializing in memory care for senior adults. For more information call (314) 542-2500 or visit our website at www.parcprovence.com.

the big clean-out


Shortly after my mom died in 2004, My dad and I had the project to clean out his home office. There were years and years of accumulation of paper and such which had to be looked through. Wally had the hoarding gene and this was a extremely difficult task for him to throw anything out. We persevered and he stood proudly by this trash pile.
Cherrie Belin Bierley

CEMS News, Spring '05



This article was taken from the University of Minnesota's Chemical Engineering and Material Science Newsletter (CEMS News) spring 2005 newsletter. The article was a reminiscence of Wally's days at the University. And I thought I had some wild times!
daughter - Cherrie Belin Bierley

CEMS ALUMNI
SO MANY WONDERFUL STORIES: HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE ‘40’s
written by Wallace K. Belin (BChE, 1941) CEMS News • Spring 2005

The first thing that came to mind was having Tom Valenty (BChE, 1941, retired president Onan, Inc.) and Earl Johnson (BChE 1941) bouncing cars sideways in the parking lot, so we could squeeze my ’27 Chevrolet in the space (bought for $65). Next, came the big snow in 1940, when the streetcars stopped running. I could not get out of the E.E. building, where I was editor of the Techno-Log office, to get a bed at AXZ house six blocks away. I phoned my mother, and stretched out on a table with a big Webster’s dictionary as a pillow, and went to sleep. Slightly more serious was the initiation into AXZ and Plumb Bob (honorary scholarship and leadership), like carrying a bowling ball on an all night treasure hunt, getting lost in the tunnels under the University of Minnesota, being dressed as a girl and applying at a sorority house. We had to attend classes that morning. Tom Valenty and Orfeo Befer (BChE, 1941) were co-sufferers. Dr. Mann, Department Head of Chemical Engineering, probably had the most influence on my life vision. I really had to work hard to pass his courses and the summer lab course in making a silver bar out of the lab waste. I remember my friend, Donald Lindsten (BChE, 1940, deceased) blowing the head off an autoclave. I also remember the field trips to various manufacturing plants including the tannery (it stank) and the whiskey distillery, after which many classmates passed out in the hotel lobby after too many samples. Other memories are of winning the BMOC Tug of War with Football players on our side, and AXE winning the most active fraternity title. We had some fun when the Minnesota Daily reported a meeting as the Chemical English Society. Just for your information, Monsanto signed me up for a job in November before my graduation in June for $300/month. The first man to get a job was a fellow by the name of Willard D. Stenborg (BChE, 1941). He was a straight A student, which I was not. I stayed with Monsanto for 18 years, was plant manager at several locations and general manager of Monsanto Operations in Mexico. I then became a finances consultant (stock broker) with Smith Barney for 20 years. I retired when I was 76 years old. I almost forgot my most exciting memory. While sitting at the printers, I rushed out an editorial on how chemical engineering took the discoveries of the chemists and converted them to profitable processes for industry. Several other colleges copied the editorial with credit to me. Some praised it and some ridiculed it. All in all, I never became rich but have had a wonderful life.

In Lieu of Flowers


In lieu of flowers . . .
Wally and Merle Belin were involved in Washington University's Project on Aging and Memory. Wally was interviewed every 6 months for 10 years. They monitored his digression with Alzheimer's with interviews and tests. They also interviewed Merle and other care-givers. He was unable to donate his brain to their program because of transportation issues after his death in Mexico.

In lieu of flowers please send charitable contributions in Wally's name to W.U. Center for Aging and mailing it to:
(Please include your name and address/email)

W. U. Center for Aging
Project for Memory and Aging
4488 Forest Park Ave.
Suite 130
St. Louis, MO 63108

Or, you may call Washington University at (314) 286-2881 to personally speak with a member of their staff for information about making a donation. All major credit cards are accepted.
http://wucfa.wustl.edu/giftstributes/giftsandtributes.htm