Martin, Boomer? You really don't know your @$$ from up do you? If he was a married college professor in the 50's, he had to have been born in the 20's or 30's at the latest. The so called "boomer" generation didn't start until 1946 and lasted until 1964.
So, if he was born during the first year of the boomers ('46) he would have had to become a college professor somewhere between age 4 (1950) and age 13 (1959).
"Genetics is so cool, my parents always told me I looked like my dad’s mom but I never got to meet her before she passed away. On the right is my grandmother holding my dad and left is me holding my son, taken exactly 63 years apart!"
Martin, Boomer? You really don't know your @$$ from up do you? If he was a married college professor in the 50's, he had to have been born in the 20's or 30's at the latest. The so called "boomer" generation didn't start until 1946 and lasted until 1964.
So, if he was born during the first year of the boomers ('46) he would have had to become a college professor somewhere between age 4 (1950) and age 13 (1959).
So, if he was born during the first year of the boomers ('46) he would have had to become a college professor somewhere between age 4 (1950) and age 13 (1959).