Murphy High 1959

 
Class of 1959

Welcome to Murphy High

Atlanta, GA

Murphy High 1959
Murphy High 1959
Murphy High 1959
Murphy High 1959
Murphy High Air 1959
Basketball Team Atlanta Champs 1959
Murphy High 1959
Atlanta City Champs 1959
Senior Girls Glee Club
Jean Lines & Hugh Clark
Senior Girls Glee Club
Jean Lines & Hugh Clark

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Murphy High Alma Mater
To Murphy High we sing today
And raise our voices high,
We pledge our love and loyalty,
From earth unto the sky.
For love and truth and honor too,
Your white and royal blue,
Our hearts hold dear your memories,
Our Alma Mater true.
Oh, Blue and White we love the true
As we have in the past,
So keep our colors flying high,
It's Murphy to the last.
We praise thy name in everyway
And cherish thoughts of thee,
May all thy spirit and thy fame
Live through eternity.

CAN YOU REMEMBER THE TIMES WHEN
     ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~      
Stroll with me.... Close your eyes ... and go back ... before the Internet ... before bombings, aids, herpes       before semiautomatics and crack ...  before SEGA or       Super Nintendo ... way back!   I'm talking about sitting on the curb, sitting on the       stoop...about hide-and-go-seek; Simon says and  red-light-green-light. Lunch boxes with a thermos ...  chocolate milk, going home for lunch, penny candy from the store, hopscotch, butterscotch, skates with keys, jacks and Cracker Jacks, hula hoops and sunflower seeds, wax lips and mustaches, Mary Jane's, saddle       shoes and Coke bottles with the names of cities on the bottom.  Remember when it ! took five minutes for the TV to warm up. When nearly everyone's Mom was at home when the kids arrived home from school. When nobody owned a purebred dog. When a quarter was a decent allowance.  When you'd reach into a muddy gutter for a penny. When       your Mom wore nylons that
 came in two pieces.  When all of your male teachers wore neckties and female teachers had their hair done everyday and wore high heels.  Remember running through the sprinkler, circle pins, bobby pins, Mickey Mouse Club, Rocky and Bullwinkle, Kookla,  Fran and Ollie, Spin and Marty...Dick Clark's American Bandstand ... all in black and white and your Mom made you turn it off when a storm came.  When around the corner seemed far away, and going downtown seemed like going somewhere. Climbing trees, making forts, backyard shows, lemonade stands, cops and robbers, cowboys and Indians, staring at clouds, jumping on the bed, pillow fights, ribbon candy, angel hair on the Christmas tree, Jackie Gleason, white gloves, walking to the movie theater, running till you were out of breath, laughing so hard that your stomach hurt...remember that?   Not stepping on a crack or you'd break your mother's  back ... paper-chains at Christmas, silhouettes of Lincoln and Washington, the smells of school, of paste and Evening in Paris.  
   
What about the girl who dotted her i's with hearts?   (that was before that stupid smiley face)! The Stroll,       popcorn balls and sock hops? Remember when there were just two types of sneakers for girls and boys - Keds       and PF Flyers, and the only time you wore
 them at school was for gym. And the girls had those ugly gym uniforms.   When you got your windshield cleaned, oil checked, and gas pumped, without asking -- all for free – every time!  And, you didn't pay for air either, and you got trading stamps to boot!  When laundry detergent had free glasses, dishes or towels hidden inside the box. When it was considered a great privilege to be taken out to dinner at a real restaurant with your parents. When the worst thing you could do at school was flunk a test or chew gum.  And             the prom was in the gym or the lunchroom and you danced to a real orchestra. When they threatened to keep kids back a grade if they failed -- and did!  When being sent to the principal's office was nothing compared to the fate that awaited the student at home.    
   
Basically, we were in fear for our lives, but it wasn't because of drive-by shootings, rugs, gangs, etc. Our parents and grandparents were a much bigger threat!  But we survived because their love was so much greater       than the threat.  Remember when a '57 Chevy was everyone's dream car -- used to cruise, peel out, lay rubber, scratch off or watch the submarine races?  When people went steady; and girls wore a class ring with an inch of      wrapped    Band-Aids, dental floss, or yarn coated with pastel-frost nail polish so it would fit their finger.  When no one ever asked where the car keys were because they were always in the car, in the ignition, and the car and house doors were never locked!  Remember lying on your back on the grass with your friends and saying things like "That cloud looks like  a..." And playing baseball with no adults needed to enforce the rules of the game.  Remember when stuff from the store came without safety caps and hermetic seals, because no one had yet tried to poison a perfect stranger.  And, with all our progress, don't you just wish, that  just once you could slip back in time and savor the       slower pace...and share it with the children of today? 
   
So send this on to someone who can still remember Nancy Drew, The Hardy Boys, Laur! el and Hardy, Howdy Dowdy and The Peanut Gallery, The Lone Ranger and Tonto, The Shadow Knows, Nellie Belle, Roy and Dale, Trigger and Buttermilk...  As well as the sound of a real mower on Saturday morning, and Summers filled with bike rides, baseball games, bowling, visits to the pool ... and eating Kool- Aid powder with sugar from the palm of your hand.  There, didn't that feel good? Just to lean back and say: "Yeah...I remember......."  (Pass this on to those who might remember, and those who can see what might be missing.)



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