“…In Europe, similar patterns have been observed in a sample from Brussels (Susanne and Vercauteren, 1997), where the authors found no significant differences due to social background in age at menarche; in Greek girls (Papadimitriou et al, 1999) in the modern middle-class Athenian society, parental education did not influence age at menarche in middle-class Athens; in northeast England the same happened (Roberts et al, 1971(Roberts et al, , 1986. At present, some populations such as Poland (Bielicki and Welon, 1982;Bielicki et al, 1986;Laska-Mierezejewska, 1995) and many developing countries, for example, Khartoum (Sudan) (Attallah et al, 1983), Nigeria (Uche and Okorafor, 1979;Oduntan et al, 1976), Egypt (Attallah, 1978), Haiti (Barnes-Josiah and Augustin, 1995), and Venezuela (Farid-Coupal et al, 1981), showed a significant influence of parents' educational level and occupation. In France, Pasquet and Ducros (1980) found a significant influence of father occupation only between daughters of white-collar workers and farmers.…”