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Lucille M. Nixon School proudly bears the name of an
outstanding Palo Alto educator. From 1958 to 1963, Lucille ("Luchi")
Nixon served as consultant for curriculum and instruction for the
elementary grades of the Palo Alto Unified School District. She had
originally come to the district in 1948 as a classroom teacher. In
1956, she gained international attention when her poetry won her an
audience with Japan's Emperor Hirohito. She met an untimely death in
1963 at the age of 55. At that time, the Palo Alto Board of Education
lamented her loss:
"The district has lost a great educator, a teacher, a
teacher
of
teachers, and above all, a creative person of remarkable stature. In a
day of increasing specialization, she was able to make contributions on
an astonishingly wide front which embraces reading and writing, social
studies, art, literature, intercultural studies, programs for gifted
students and the stimulation of creativity in young children. The
district can take pride in the fact that it has created an environment
in which a Lucille Nixon could develop and flourish. "
When our school opened in 1970, the parents and staff of the
PAUSD gave
tribute to the contributions made by Lucille Nixon by naming our school
after her.
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