U-M chosen to honor memory of 9-11 victim
Endowment from alum Todd
Ouida's estate to fund research into childhood
anxiety
Thursday,
January 9, 2003
BY
TRACY DAVIS
News Staff Reporter
The last time Todd Joseph
Ouida spoke to his mother, he told her he
was in the stairwell of the World Trade
Center on the way down from his 105th-floor
office at Cantor Fitzgerald.
Don't worry, the 25-year-old
University of Michigan graduate said that
Sept. 11 morning. I just talked to Dad,
too, and he's fine.
Todd had not actually spoken
to his father, Herbert Ouida, who worked
on the 77th floor and made it out before
the building collapsed. But he comforted
his worried mother even as he tried to save
his own life.
That was his spirit, family
members say: He always thought of others
first.
Now his family is honoring
the memory of the young currency trader
with a $250,000 endowment from Ouida's estate
to the U-M Medical School for research,
treatment and awareness of childhood anxiety
disorders. The money is in addition to about
$100,000 more the family has given to various
organizations in New Jersey.
As a child, Ouida, who grew
up in River Edge, N.J., suffered from a
panic disorder so severe he had to leave
school, ultimately missing three years while
in intensive therapy. He returned to school
in seventh grade and grew into a popular,
generous teen who earned honors in his classes
and helped other children as a camp counselor
by telling them about his own experiences.
"I remember Todd not
being able to get on his bike and go to
school," said Herbert Ouida, retired
executive vice president of the World Trade
Centers Association. "At Cantor, he
was getting on a plane to Brazil.
"Todd loved Michigan,"
he said. "He came into his own at that
school in many ways. Of course we had to
do something at Michigan."
An avid sports fan who attended
every U-M game he could get to - his father
speculates he spent four and a half years
at Michigan so he could squeeze in one more
football season - Ouida made close friends
at U-M, where he was a psychology major,
and volunteered in an area child-mentoring
program.
"The one thing we can
do is try to help other people in his name,"
Herbert Ouida said. "If Todd had been
given a normal life span, what would he
have done? It's our responsibility to do
what he would have done, and he had used
his experience to help others.
"The good that he would
have done, we're doing in his name. This
is coming from Todd, not from us."
With the gift, the U-M Medical
School will establish the Todd Ouida Clinical
Scholars Award and annual Lecture in Childhood
Anxiety and Depression.
"The Todd Ouida Clinical
Scholars Award will support new research
on the genetic, biological and psychosocial
factors contributing to childhood anxiety
disorders, and the development of more effective
treatments for these disorders," said
Dr. Gregory L. Hanna, a medical school associate
professor and director of the Division of
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. "And
the annual lecture will allow us to focus
national attention on these important problems
and to provide information to clinicians
and researchers about the latest advances
in the field."
Ouida's family - Herbert
and mother Andrea Ouida, a brother, sister,
niece and a nephew - knew they wanted to
do something to keep his memory alive. They
mulled over options as time passed and began
to think about something at U-M a year ago.
Meanwhile, they were contacted three different
times when parts of Ouida's body were found.
Eventually, there was a cremation and service.
The family recently visited
ground zero for the last time; soon it will
be closed to the public as workers prepare
the site for a new building and memorial
that's yet to be decided upon.
Just last week, the week
Herbert Ouida retired, the phone rang one
last time. Authorities had found his son's
wallet amid the rubble being landfilled.
By then, his family had
settled on the endowment for the award and
lecture series. It seems perfect for Todd,
Herbert Ouida said, noting that Michigan
is a leader in child psychology issues.
Todd even wrote about his
struggles in his application essay to U-M,
an essay his father is convinced sealed
his admission to the school.
"Many people have life-changing
experiences every day, and they don't even
know it," Todd Ouida wrote. "My
life-changing experience lasted two and
a half years, and I remember it vividly.
Am I lucky? Maybe. I suffered for two and
a half years, but in those two and a half
years I learned more than most people learn
in a lifetime. I realized that the time
a person wants to give up is the time when
it is imperative for that person to fight
the hardest. I learned that with family
a person can overcome anything.
"And I discovered no
matter how big the person is on the outside
(for I am only 5' 5" tall) that the
size of the heart is always going to be
more important."
Tracy Davis can be reached
at tdavis@annarbornews.com
or
(734) 994-6856.
© 2003 Ann Arbor
News. Used with permission
Visit Todd
Ouida Children's Foundation
Last updated on:
Friday, 26-Jan-2007 15:00:04 EST
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