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DANIEL JOSEPH FIDUCCIA, '78, 1957-2001
He Took Adversity Head-On
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| FIGHTER: Fiduccia spent his life defending
the rights of others with disabilities. |
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Courtesy Christine Fiduccia
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WHEN DANIEL FIDUCCIA decided to become an
Eagle Scout, people told him it would be too difficult. Diagnosed in infancy
with a kidney malignancy, he had undergone a series of intense radiation
treatments that left him with a disabling spinal curvature and a weakened
immune system. Few expected the young cancer survivor to complete the
required one-mile swim. It almost killed him, remembers Fiduccias
longtime friend, Rick Santina. But he did it.
From his coordinating role in a constitutional-rights case at the Stanford
Daily to his later advocacy for the disabled, he was a fighter,
recalls Daily colleague Jim Wascher, 75. He didnt just
handle adversity; he took it head-on.
Fiduccia, who died on April 6, lost his final struggle to an aggressive
form of abdominal cancer. He was 44.
Raised in Chicago and in Palm Desert, Calif., Fiduccia arrived on the
Farm in 1974 and quickly took an interest in a legal dispute raging between
the Daily and the Palo Alto Police Department. The dispute arose two years
earlier when the police entered the offices of the independent student
newspaper to search for photos of a violent clash between officers and
demonstrators at Stanford Medical Center. Fiduccia learned so much about
the case that he became a one-man information clearinghouse, effectively
serving as the Dailys in-house liaison with lawyers, outside media
and students who had been involved in the 1972 incident. In its landmark
1978 decision, Zurcher vs. the Stanford Daily, the U.S. Supreme Court
ruled against the paper, affirming the right of police to search third
parties who are not criminal suspects.
A classics and English major, Fiduccia worked as a paralegal after graduation,
helping to protect the rights of cancer survivors and people with disabilities.
For a while he turned to freelance investigative reporting, seeking to
draw attention to gaps in disability legislation. As one of the nations
oldest survivors of childhood cancer, he went on to inspire scores of
sick children through his work with the Childhood Cancer Ombudsman Program,
guiding families through complex medical and legal matters. With
Daniel on your arm, things got done, Santina says. He viewed
himself as a soldier and a warrior.
Fiduccias professional and personal lives became entwined in 1996
when he married Barbara Waxman, a prominent advocate for the disabled,
whose own chronic illness, spinal muscular dystrophy, kept her connected
to a ventilator and confined to a wheelchair. Together, in a high-profile
battle, they persuaded the Social Security Administration to drop its
marriage penalty restricting aid for couples with disabilities.
Barbara died of respiratory failure at their Cupertino home on April 24,
just weeks after her husband succumbed to his cancer. Fiduccia is survived
by his mother, Christine.
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