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Gold Line

Interim Committee

Gold Line

Check out the interim committee members for the Purdue Alumni Medical Network. Our goal is to build a network of alumni and friends working in the health-care field—including veterinary medicine—and enhance their connections to Purdue and to each other. To learn more about the network, visit our website.

Leadership
Stephanie Stahl // Colead


Sleep Medicine Physician and Neurologist at Indiana University (IU) Health, Director of the Sleep Medicine Fellowship Program at IU, and Associate Professor of Clinical Neurology at IU

Andrea Brezill // Colead


Disease and Clinical Specialist of Immunology at Novartis


Nicole Noel // Colead


Director of Clinical and Account Management




Brian Daniels // Colead


Doctor of Sports Medicine for Nemours Children’s Health and Medical Director at USTA National Campus

Additional Committee Members

William Hayes // Secretary/Treasurer
Director of Pharmacy

Nichole Hukill // Secretary/Treasurer
Director of Contract Services at Vizient

Kathleen Reyna // Communication
Medical Student at Boston University

Libby Richards // Communication
Associate Professor of Nursing and Director of the
PhD in Nursing Program at Purdue University

Clayton Hicks // Event Cochair
Medical Student at Indiana University

Lisa Leonard Koss // Event Cochair
Nuclear Pharmacist

Carl Russell III // Event Cochair
Medical Student at Indiana University

Ti’meshia Walton // Event Cochair
Medical Patient Care Advocate

Marianne Billeter // Event Support
Home Infusion Pharmacist

Samuel Brandon // Event Support
Laboratory Scientist

Emily Buatois // Event Support
Clinical Pharmacist in Internal Medicine and
Assistant Professor of Pharmacy Practice at Texas
Tech University

Celeste H. Davis // Event Support
Attorney

Jacqueline M. Dillman // Event Support
Direct Support Professional

Peter Hu // Event Support
Associate Dean of Research and Strategic Initiatives
for the School of Health Professions at the University
of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

Amanda Lewis // Event Support
Director of Nursing

Marjorie Ramos-Salcedo // Event Support
Mental Health Professional

Susan Rouse // Event Support
Nurse

Julie Smith // Event Support
Registered Nurse

Michael Stillabower // Event Support
Physician

Matthew Tews // Event Support
Associate Dean and Regional Campus Director at the
Indiana University School of Medicine—West
Lafayette and Professor of Engineering Practice in
Biomedical Engineering at Purdue University

Cedric Webb // Event Support
Human Resources

Jeffery Williams // Event Support
Physician

Keagan’s story

I’m walking with Grandparents University tour group near the steps of Hovde Hall. It’s a Thursday morning in July, and the only students around are between the ages of 7 and 14. I catch a snippet of a conversation between a grandmother and her grandson as she details the pranks she pulled with her friends around this area.

I smile because just a few months ago I was doing the same thing.

Grandparents University (GPU) is a two-day event where grandparents and their grandchildren embrace Purdue and all it has to offer.

Participants choose a specific major to study and attend a class taught by Boilermaker experts. The majors aren’t exactly like the ones we have here at Purdue, but they do get to do cool activities like creating hot sauce, designing monsters, flying drones, and cooking in a Purdue kitchen. It’s a great opportunity to see wisdom and curiosity combined in the classroom, as grandparents and their grandchildren collaborate on these projects. They’re equally willing to learn from the instructors —and from each other—while creating lasting memories.

They might not know it yet, but this Purdue experience at such a young age will help with their college decision in a few years.

My mother started working at Purdue when she was pregnant with me, so I’ve been familiar with the university my whole life. Many of my childhood memories are associated with different parts of campus, and these memories played a big part in my decision to attend Purdue. I was going to a place that I knew—a place I already considered a home away from home. In the same way, when these children make their college decisions, they will already have built connections with Purdue through Grandparents University.

It will also help they already have a Purdue degree!

At the end of GPU, the kids graduate just like regular students by walking across the stage of Elliott Hall of Music. They even have their own caps to decorate and keep—which is great because robe rentals would be a nightmare.

I had been to nine commencement ceremonies before my own in May, so I’m well-versed in Purdue graduations. Nevertheless, it was still fun to watch this one.

These children had learned so much more than what was taught in their major. They learned more about their grandparents and strengthened their connection with them. They learned about the university and what’s in store for them when they (hopefully) become Boilermakers. And at the Block Party, they befriended students they had never met before and hung out on Memorial Mall—just like regular college students.

It was almost exactly what I experienced throughout my college career. Yes, I got my degree and now  have a job as was intended on this life path. But I also made lifelong friendships and went outside my comfort zone in ways that helped me grow as an individual.

Purdue shaped me and continues to shape me. I credit a lot of my growth as a person and a professional to my college career here, and a lot of what I know to the professors and instructors I had throughout my education.

Through Grandparents University, you have the opportunity to provide the same transformative experience for future Boilermakers. You can be the Purdue instructor that inspires a path that lasts a lifetime.

Patsy J. Mellott

BS College of Health and Human Sciences, 1969
Fishers, IN

Patsy earned a bachelor’s degree in food and nutrition in business from Purdue in 1969, in addition to an MBA in food marketing from Michigan State University in 1970. She retired from Kraft Foods in 2006 after 36 years in corporate food marketing and marketing communications management.

A community volunteer, Patsy serves on the Women’s Fund of Central Indiana Advisory Board and the Purdue College of Health and Human Sciences Dean’s Leadership Council, in addition to the President’s Council Advisory Board. She is a former member of the Health and Human Sciences Alumni Board. Patsy held several offices from 2006 through 2013, including president and treasurer. She serves her community’s Discover Indianapolis Club in Fishers, holding several leadership roles for over 10 years.

Patsy has received several honors, including the Purdue University Nutrition Science Department Hall of Fame recipient in 2009 and the Purdue University College of Health and Human Sciences Distinguished Alumni Award in 2016. She also received the college’s Gold and Black Award in 2016, an honor reserved for donors who have moved the college forward by committing exceptional financial resources.

In addition to endowing two scholarships, the Patsy J. Mellott Scholarship and Patsy J. Mellott HHS Scholarship, she established the Patsy J. Mellott Teaching Innovation Award in the College of Health and Human Sciences in 2013. In 2015, she endowed the Patsy J. Mellott Women’s Tennis Coach Performance Award. She is a lead donor in the Christine M. Ladisch Faculty Leadership Award and the Purdue Women’s Network Virginia C. Meredith Scholarship for the College of Health and Human Sciences.