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The New Canadian — June 2, 1970

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Page 1

haH^JSS? Sons Have Hard Time SearchingW For Potential Wives
By MASAKO OUZ1LIM

|

rptm-nnn

I TOKYO.-—Farmers’ sons in Japan are finding it
Lore atd more difficult to find girls willing to marry

^ Even marriage brokers, with incentive payments to
Lur them into finding brides for farmers’ sons, are
hiving little success. In the farming areas of the
country the numbers of bachelor- farmers and of spin^ are rising. The men tend to look hopefully at
ie marriage brokers. The girls are less patient.
[ihe number of girl runaways from farms to seek
a salaried man to marry — Japanese girls yearn for
is increasing. Some are caught
Salaried worker:
special
squads
of
police at major stations and
IV

iitor

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t.

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ded

e

returned home; oth ers tall int
bar
Alarmed by th s situation
J apanese
established marr ge con suit a : offices
th
problem and ”kCiep everyone
irov and
Sadao Sato is one of the leader
tired farmer, he ha taken on the burden of
to keep the younger generation from desertins
farms
for the city. He i s one of the 20 marri
known as “tengas ama,” or honorable u1
bato and other consultants in
able
arrange and act as “go-betweens tor
riages. But last year they were
liable to clinch
single marriage proposal. No one was interested
seeking the advice of consultants.

So the consultants held a convention to map out a
“bride hunt” strategy. They hit upon the idea of “imomkai.' or potato picnic, a traditional Japanese annual
gathering of marriageable young- men and women.
The turn out was a tremendous succe; ss. The “tengasama” were delighted. Rut the affair was a disap□ointment. No
proposals materialized, only
three unofficial pregnancie
According to popular su
, nearly 40 percent of
the girls questioned in farming communities stoutly
refused to consider a farmer’s son as a husband. They
preferred to die as spinsters rather then being farmers’
wives.

............ ..

(Continued on Page 8)
........ .............................................................. . .............. .................. ............................ . ........................... .. ...................................... ........................ „„„„,„....... ...

“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.50
(plus postage)

he Ueto
An Indspcndsni Orscin for CGnodisns o? JcpcsnssG Origin

?'
For

Vol. XXXIV—No. 43

TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1970

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19

Toronto, Ont.
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Sansei bad Honored By Gouerner
I The Etiological Significance General For Courageous Deed
PART THREE

h

immb
an Pa-

I Of The Family For Delipency |

th the
ise ci
it is
The Following seminar paper was initially presented by the
>ns ori ■miter, Mr. E. S. Yohida at the Centre of Criminology, University of
i!d® ■Toronto. Mr. Yoshida is a well known Nisei Probation Officer
tee ■working out of the Scarboro Probation Office.

es.)

STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
By MISS J.L. BEATTIE
„ $5.00 (plus postage)

S

OTTAWA. — Allan Shiozaki,
11-year old Sansei boy from
Willowdale, Ontario was honored
recently by the Governor Gen­
eral of Canada, for risking per­
sonal danger to save the life of
5-year-old kindergarten pupil.
While on school crossing patrol,
Allan — a student of Willowdale’s
Silverveiw Public School — pul­
led the 5-year-old boy from the
path of a car and away from
certain injury or death. The
youngster had disobeyed his sig­
nal and darted into the path of
an oncoming car.
Governor General Roland Mi­
chener
presented the Canadian
Automobile Association Gold
Lifesaver at a ceremony in Gov­
ernment House. The Governor
General praised
the dedication
and courage of Allan, whose quick
response prevented a serious ac­
cident.
While 164 boys and girls in
North America have earned this
highest award during the past
21 years, Allan is the only Cana­
dian so honored this year.
Allan is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. David Shiozaki of Willowdale, Ontario.

By E. s. YOSHIDA

K The other aspect of family unhappiness could be the parentKchild conflict. Students of the subject feel that this relational
■problem can cause greater harmful effect upon the behavior of a
■child than even husband-wife tension. Joan Chesley, in appraisingKtte differential influences of broken home and severe intra-family
■|conflict, affirms: “In place of the concept of broken home we need
?oncePt of the disturbed parent-child relationship.”
. at it directly causes a child to act out delinquently, but that
drives him to seek meaningful social relationships with his
nSe values may not always be socially acceptable. The
B‘a^p
Probation cases and Pre-sentence Reports (from Scarboro
■ and York Probation files) show only a minority related to marital
tension could well mean that parent-child conflict may be a kev
ffiiattor.

Ka The case ofJune Drenowski (pseudonym) may well illustrate
effect of parent-child conflict. On November 17,
• “e Yas convicted for- Breaking and Entering-—without anv
g previous criminal record.
Parents had immigrated to Canada just prior to her
t f°urfh oldest in the family of five children, three
°- Vs’ Tihe oldest brother is presently a patient in an
J hospital, recuperating from drug addiction. It would apvJy beaapoural problems for this family emerged soon after
imanv i
i the.youngest child, who had eczema. Mother spent
inPTvm ee j— n^hts with him, eventually resulting in her own
.colldition. The oldest son started to show delinquent beI Darpn/
™s Period. Presently, none of the children live with
gs except the youngest—they all left home at an early age.

Im'’

j^611^, ^erse^ admitted that conflict existed between
I and r na ?er< ‘ ^e exPects us all to get a job when we reach 16,
I our
Sei2 Pre&nant he would not take care of me ... If I stayed
line
Lher wou^ blame mother and make her cry. He bought
I rouiwpr
even new shoes, but bought everything for my
^er' ' •” She ran away from home twice before her

birthday, and has been a vagrant since.
I

Phantom Bather Shocks Bathhouse Women

AND/OR BROKEN HOME

The intruder, Hitomi Ishiguro, noticed a figure, who
looked
Women taking
TOKYO.
midnight baths at a public bath­ 22, a cook of Nippori of the like a man, was taking a bath in
house in Arakawa Ward, Tokyo, same ward, was arrested while the same tub with them.
recently were shocked when they he was sitting in the hot water
discovered that one of them was up to his chin, in the women’s sec­
The police found the youth
tion of the bathhouse.
wearing his hair very long, the
a man.
It was a little past midnight police also found woman’s under­
They
immediately
informed
the operator of the bathhouse of when two frightened women wear, including a pair of frilled
the presence of an intruder and bathers rushed to the bathhouse panties in a bamboo basket on
5xSl^e reaction to mother. E.g.—refusal to recognize her the operator in turn called police. keeper and told him that they the dressing floor, which was
apparently the garment he used
a^er a period of absence.
for feminine impersonation.
ma^T^6 demands upon mother or mother-substitute. This
exPressed in acute jealousies or temper tantrums.
The youth had tried in vain
3)
1*
at
4achment
to
adults
within
its
orbit,
to
sneak into the women’s section
4)
withdrawal from emotional entanglements with
of public bathhouses twice in the
H^h n?U?_ rockin& o? the body.
past, according to the police.
5)
js ‘a./1
°f becoming inadequate parents.
SEATTLE. — Senator Barry speaking of “the Jap” in a World
At his third try, he was suc­
I End/or
tliis paper to look at parental deprivation Goldwater ran
into trouble in War II reference in his speech. cessful for several minutes un­
&5J'pri]i4
® general, viz., in its overall effect upon the the question and answer session
voice
“I don’t know,” Goldwater told til he heard a booming
I £ffect of, ?n proceed to discuss specifically the differential following his recent speech at
| fi reference ^ 17aLeniai and pure paternal deprivation. Its frames Seattle University.
the young man. He uttered some­ above his head, “come on, you
| ^kboln^a] falcate that deprivation can be both physical and
thing. about “a habit of long are a man, aren’t you, get away,
One student asked solemly, standing. It’s just like you might you bum.”
call someone by a nickname.”
The police also admonished the
Pental X *;?'*•5eems ^° ^e divided on the particular effects ‘Why did you use the word
5kion or ^mabon. an^°r broken home—whether by death, Jap’ ?”
The young man frowned and bathhouse keeper for laxity and
told him to keep an eye on
xvorce—with a slightly more weight of concurrence
quizzical, wagged his head slowly in si­ customers who frequent his bath­
looked
Goldwater
Then he seemed to remember lent disapproval.
house at night. —Japan Times
(Continued on Page 8)

na^on as regarded by Bowlby as lack of that warm,
I his narpJC01klllU01?s relationship which a child naturally has with
I such* as Tv lsPeciahy his mother in early childhood. Authorities
i parental /' • ° . arb and Anna Freud are generally agi-eed that
। lasting
'atl°5—depending on its intensity and quality—has
' child.
er^e effects on the psycho-social development of a
65 are:
e ” these effects on children of anal and oedipal stag-

US Jewish Senator Uses Epithet

Page 2

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Phone CR. 8-9585
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Page 7

1970

dW. Jtr

PAGE 7

Oriental Actors Protest
li
A “White” Sakini
10

tee e.
qbns for
"Teahouse c
Edwin Lest

CmuuU

Kisaragi Uub To Hold Dance at Centre June 13th

TORONTO.—T1
h — Members of the Ethnic Minoriti
Equity Association voted recently to
day. June
ely Ladies. Kind Gentlemen” musical ver
Ever
he August Moon,” set for a September premier
and the Los Angeles Civic Light Opera Asso'ork's Herman Levin.

action was taken in support of Asian actors who sirens
eq to the casting of a Caucasian in the key role of Sakini
we came at the quarterly meeting of the Ethnic Minori-tee held at the Inner City Cultural Center.
Many of the Asian actors who attended are members of the
--West Players, the predominantly Asian acting company basAngeles. They pointed out that the entertainment inin
comin-.-Mly overlooked talents in the Asian-American
even when parts specifically call for Asian actors.

o

no;a its h uw-up
s W est Room on

Probation Officer Yoshida to Speak at Isseibu Meet
TORONTO,
of the Sea

prebut ion
'ne goes
seibu. Tli
F
June 12'1

will be held at tm
8:30 p.m.
Mr. Yoshida is
Canadian, entitled,
For Delinquency'’.
Everyone is ur

918 Bathurst St.

Telephone:

Monthly Memorial

534-4302

‘iiiiiniiininiimmiiniHnnnniiiiHnniniiHiniLinHiHiiniiiinmnniniini



FIRE



LI EK

ALL FORMS
OF

INSURANCE
consult

{

KIYO TAMURA

|

TOHONTO

j

Bus. 366-5812

Bu®

Res. Pl.9-8317 j

824-815J

822-1353

ERNEST JOMORi
Accountant

Chartered

403

Suite

130 BLOOB ST. W.

TORONTO

TORONTO.—The Toronto Japanese Garden Club recently re­
elected their President, Mr. Mamoru Nishi at their annual General

TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
St. John's Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128. Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.

'Read Jesste L. Beattie’s

STRENGTH FOR THE BRIDGE
A Japanese Canadian story

Available at The New Canadian For $5.50

TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
701 Dovc-rcourt Re..

South of Bloor

SUNDAY JUNE 7, 1970. 11:30 A.M.
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 766-5632
English — Rev. Ken Matsugu. 444-5159
Church School ‘or the children
A warm welcome to all.

Toronto 2-B, Ontario

Custom Picture
Franting

NISHIMURA
1278
Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
Totio Nwhlmura
023-6877

KINO'S MARKET

Red & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C
Phone 355-2211

DANFORTH
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It’s Private! No Time Limit!
Gsi ths most enjoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
Henty of delicious food! Plenty of free parking’

‘75 Eglinton W. Toronto

132 Baldwin St, Toronto
Phone 368-9225

1'970

E:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service
2:® P.M. Japanese Service

ClfliA

Made To Measure
And Alterations

AUTO

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH

479 Queen Street West

2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone S6S-46S1

Chris Nomura
mee

The following have been elected u
for
A subcommittee, headed by Academy Award nominee Mako the coming term: — President Ma mom
jfTne Sand Pebbles”), has been established to organize additional Tosh Oikawa, Junichi Sunohara; Secret
Kyoko Abe; As
Ruppert for the boycott. The group intends to ask both actors sistant secretary — Taye Miyamoto; Tre
— Midori Iwasaki
■across the nation and the general public to join in the boycott of Hon. executives — Chukichi Oyagi. Gloria Sumiya. Hon. Yakuin •—
lovely Ladies. Kind Gentlemen.’7
Kin Izumi; Auditors — Naoiehi Karatsu, Tomiye Toguri: Cor­
respondent secretary — (Eng.) 'Tosh Oikawa, (Japanese) Nobuko
Mitsui. —T.G.C.
SUNDAY, JUNE 7,

WiHicm Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents

MEN'S SUITS

The part of Sakini has been played by Marlon Brando, David
hpe, Eli Wallach and Burgess Meredith. Negotiations with pro;r Herman Levin failed to bring about even a willingness to
interview Asian actors on the grounds that the role had already Nisansei Kai Presents "Frat House Frolic" June 6
n committed.
10R0NT0.—The Nisansei
would like to announce
Actress Virginia Wing said Asians feel the same way about
first major
he vear — “Frat House Frolic."
yhi:e actors being made up to play Orientals as blacks used to
This
dance,
which
will
present
ft- about the use of burnt cork and white lip make-up in Ameriand B sounds, will take place on 8
2- minstrel shows.
Mario Alcalde, chairman of the Ethnic Minorities Committee
;t. just north of Bl
bid that when producers Levin and Lester are willing to cast the
Admission is $2.0(> or $1.00 with, membership
|art of Captain Frisbee with an Asian actor, then perhaps Asian
especially invited to come
For further
might be able to understand an Occidental being cast as
information phone Van Hori o
fekini.
• He went on to say this has been a long-standing abuse in
*
American film and theater, pointing out that not one of five actors
ing Charlie Chan was an Asian.
M. Nishi Reelected Pres. Of Japanese Garden Club

The Ethnic Minorities Committee, consisting of blacks Asians.
^lexican-Americans and whites, agreed to support demands of the
As:?.:: actors: i.e.. that the Civic Light Opera enter into serious
ssions on this question.

It b a good policy to
bav« tbs BIGHT POUCT

Dates And Doings

Tokar®

Jewellers

"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment

Fishing Tackle
Dew Worms and
Fishing Licenses
551 Danforth Ave.,
(near
George

Carlaw)

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Phone: HO. 3-7400
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.

Mon. — Friday 9—6. Sat. 9—1.
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1204. Phone 363-0952

HOUSE

Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe

RU. 1-9123
OF TORONTO

“UY and Sell

Your Home
Through

mas

Lichee Garden J
(Dining Lounge)
Toronto, Canada
118 Elizabeth St.

* FORMAL RENTALS
Cushrn Medo Suit?
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Phone 364-3481

(Ron) MENDE

(4 Lines To Serve You)
CATERING SERVICE — ‘'TAKE-OUT" ORDERS

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Banquet Facilities

(Tosh Iwai)

757-5184

Fer Business Or Private Parties
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
DINNEP. MUSIC NIGHTLY
9S
a

437 Danforth Avc. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104

Page 8

PAGE 8

Delinquency . . .

Cent. from Page One

The New Canady

falling .on the probable negative influence of parental deprivation. of broken homes
Second class sag
background of institutional children is be0388
■\ numoer o± studies made after the famous Shaw-McKay Studv cause rhe courts are left with no other option.
A member ofOttaier
Etbhc
,
of Juvenile Delinquency in Cook Countv (Chicago) bears out this
cl Oniarii
Geismar
and
Ayres
also
could
not
observe
any
correspondence
observation.
between broken home and delinquency. "Tn our sample of juvenile
PUBLISHED ON EVERv
R.
AND FRIDAY^'
van showed that the proportion delinquents. both
adjudicated' and non adjudicated, it bore no re'
of broken home,
ently from the control group of lationshin to broken homes.” But they qualified their statement
boys (21%) to
T. UMEZUKI
t boys (35% ), to the ’ institu- by saying that their observation is valid only for that class of
KEN MORI JapanAfe
tionalized 49 , and to the in
people, and not for a wider generalization.
Second, the Spokane Study of 13S7. after a careful comparaHaving dealt with broken home and parental deprivation in
K. C. TSUM®
five study of public school boys, 14—17 years of age, and delingeneral,
the
paper
now
elects
to
move
in
English
Section E^.
on
the
specific
effects
quent boys revealed that the percentage of broken homes was 27
of
pure
maternal
and
paternal
deprivation,
which
are
not
so
easily
and 41 respectively
« SUBSCRIPTION
distinguishable.
^sToo^k.3 aw!hj
Third, Merrill's
ching of
•7^ per y&cr
The case for maternal deprivation has been ably represented
to court in a rural California
by
Bowlby,
Ainsworth,
Goldfarb,
et
al.
They
see
maternal
depriva
­
out that <51% of the delinque
came
broken homes while
tion as the ‘''foremost among causes of delinquency.” In his Fortyonly 27% were from the control group.
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
four
Juvenile Thieves Bowlby explains: “. . . prolonged separation
Fourth, Wittman and Hoffman’s Study of teen-aged youths
of
the
child
from
his
mother
(or
mother-substitute)
during
the
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
in Elgin County, Illinois, disclosed that their proportionately high
first
5
years
of
his
life
stands
among
the
causes
of
delinquent
EMpirs S-5005
number of institutionalized youths came from broken home.
character development.”
compared to high school students in the same area.
To support- his theory Bowlby marshals forth convincing • ex­
Fifth, the highly publicized Unraveling Juvenile Delinquency
amples
from retrospective studies made of known delinquents. The Use New Canadian Ads
by the Gluecks in the Boston area analyzed that while 50% of
1930
study
of delinquent children made by six caseworkers is cited.
juvenile delinquents, lived with their parents, 71 %• of the children
These
delinquents
had no feeling for anyone; they were persistent
of the control group lived with theirs.
For Be^t Results
thieves; they were violent and full of egotism; they were guilty of
Sixth, a study of pre-war delinquent made in England by sexual misdemeanours; their deceit and evasism were often point­
Carr-Saunders and others resulted in a
igher in- less; they suffered from lack of concentration; above all, they
cidence of delinquents coming from broken homes than the controls.
were most difficult to treat. Here, it was learned that they suffered
Seventh, Monahan in his Philadelphia project saw a propor­ from disturbing relationship with their mothers in their early
tionate increase in the rate of broken homes from the first offender childhood.
to the recidivist, to the probations
tile inmate of an inAnothei- study Bowlby describes is that of the 530 prostitutes
stitution. Among the delinquents the
of broken homes was in Copenhagen. They were chronically in trouble and shifting their
______ Help Wanted
from % of white boys to hi of negro girls, Less than % of delinconditions constantly. It was learned that at least % of them EXPERIENCED d-arkkTL
orient negro boys came from broken homes.
ed. Apply ---- were not reared at home.
/oa-oz// (lorcnto).
Eighth,
Cowie
et
al's
summation
on
the
,
-—
---- Magdalen girls (MagThe Pre-sentence report of John Doe is a case in point for
aalen Classifying School for wayward, deprived, emotionally dis­ the impact H material deprivation on delinquency. Convicted on
Female Help Wanted
turbed girls) reveals a high incidence of broken homes among them. July 19, 196/, for two counts of Breaking and Entering and one
LADY designer for ’arae
:
1 hey report tnat 146 cases or 46% of their girls came from broken
Misses dresses. Must b/kk
homes, of which 19% broke up on account of either parental sepa- count of auto theft, he already had a criminal record: June 2/69 and
■—Take auto without consent; July 3/69—Vagrancy A; July 18. ed. 364-7948 (Toronto).'" " ~ ~
UaVon or divorce. And less than 2'7 came from those homes super­ 1969— Possession (2 charges) and abscond bail; Julv 19, 1969— CTMWMBMIIIMIIII Illi "l.l^UluiM.a ITHOWIHUI—
ficially regarded as normal. Yet they are not unaware of the pro­ Possession, sentenced for 3 months.
____ Articles For Sale
pensity of the courts to send girls from broken homes to such
RECONDITIONED TATTkcT
John was born a love child to a 19-yr.-old girl and her mechanic
institutions. So they feel that the “etiological significance’’ is not
able console, from J;0. un. 'pk .
convincing enough.
boy-friend. His parents were not able or not willing to raise him Phone 755-9291 (Toronto'
Ninth, Ivy Bennett’s Delinquent And Neurotic Children: A Com- so he was placed in a foster, home for the first couple of years. At
state. that, physical parent-child separation occured age 3 he was adopted by his present parents, who already had a
more frequently among- delinquent children then in neurotic chil­ o-year-old girl. In school John was incapable of any concentration Lucky Farmers
dren, especially in those early years. She similarly finds a higher or motivation, thus proving himself to be a poor student. Informants
(Continued from Page 19 I
rate of disruption of the emotional relationship 'between mother felt that John did not enjoy warm, intimate relationship with his
adoptive parents. They related that his parents were overly careful
and child among delinquent children than neurotic children. And
A marriage consultation offd |
more in the disruption of the father-child "t^lck of ^^
CHd UOt Want hi™ tO 'interPret
recently received matrimonial ap- i
relationship.
plications from (>5u men and 1.- |
paper

Some
Effect
Of
Fa*hm
i
behawoi,
his
mother
relates,
became
noticeably
worse
456
women. More than 70 per- I
Tenth, McCord et al in then
cent
of the women categoricaik I
Abnorm
^oc
&
INvch
)
"
e
'
e
A
ear
f
of
,
1
ag
.
e
'
H
®
seemed
to
require
more
attention
Absence On The Male Child,’’ (J
. ot. x i^ch.) agiem and was creating trouble in order to get it. His own familv caught state that farmers’ sons were on: I
that iatner than the father absence itself, it was the general in­
um as
lying
nad thief*
stealing
many times. In fact, his sister describes of the question. The remaining-1
stability of the broken home that pre-disposes a youngster toward him
"a"‘born

30 percent were prepared to cor
delinquency.
K°uevei\ Bowlby’s hypothesis has become increasingly under sider a farming marriage provic >5
Jacqueline Iherriens (pseudonym will be used here and in
ed their prospective husband
attack through knowledge emerging out of more recent investma- were sons of orchard owner
all subsequent
samples) file
to
reinforce
- 3
ot the probable delinquency-prone result of parental deprivation and
-^'A-. ^a?’n» her remark.
the
A? a
Y T°f °0° chi dren taken in at horticulture farmers,
i
deception Centre, Hilda Lewis points out that these
Why is it that Japanese
or th broken home She was convicted for an offence in Van- r ™
patterns
k
S°^
significant
association
with
are
couvcr, B.C. She
the fourth child of a familv of five children
are now
now so allergic to far?*
partei
ns
ox
tneir
disturbed
oehavior:
three sons and two daughter .Her youngest brother spent a term
The main reasons are: the
P Mother was either neurotic or psychopathic.
in an Ontario Reformatorv.
that in farm families wivesv
2) Mother was lacking in affection.
to
work hard. Sometimes ha?
JIer alcoholic father deserted the family In year: ago, and h
o) Father was lacking in affection.
than the husbands; the lad
mother was left to care for the children by herself for two sub­
4) Prolonged wardship.
regular holidays; and the tn
wards of the Children's
5) Illegitimacy at birth.
tional proneness among fa’
But she does not support theories which associate psvchonathic to have big families.
suffered from nervous breakdown and spent :
iMuibance . including delinquency—with maternal deprivation For
i menta1
Many Tok
hospital. The offender herself was reared in
says a marriage consultatio
I
until the age of nine, when
Kve with her
At the ay
of
oecause tney
was found

CLASSIFIED

baling. truancy and vagran^Xk pend*1 Vo™whthat tge validity of Lewis’ argument de-

control tne h'

K^n bi’w V- <

tiers
? W Tea”s bY ‘Significant association.” If pro- wTw’
"-aith'P xHS 1OUnd 111 the background of her Mersham 5^1___________
[
cmihitn,
is that not a case tor maternal deprivation?)
.e et al suceintly
up the case
i. positive inter­
attempts to repudiate the “maternal denip when thev s;
BUS. 78342s!
considered that m.;v5ari-ett
RES. 231-0863

at
T
n
^hoolA-cter
checking
into
the
records
of
52
out
of
a
can
3101
Bathurst:
re I a
Il Ivy Lea Cres.
tionship b
5
referred to the Medical Officer of Health in Seanorf
rue
and delinqu
0™
rate eight
that of the general P^ula'
MRS. SATOKO SATO
I
was

°
evidence
of maternal deprivation.
then
o
h n °
tBeni ? be more ^T^ected than deprived —in terms
All types of insurance
CkTl '“TP
parental retardation, ovlnS
broken
The ne
and Luk ox toilet training and other disciplines.
aw-McKav
CROWN LIFE
md Controls
wa
-'rl^S doubtG°Wie
-aI
re?pect t0 the Magdalen
INSURANCE CO.
T
ru
J
S
Postulation.
They
found
neither
evidence
"The effort to I in' delinquency with broken home is probably h% 4
pkys
PVt 1Wr was there stW evidence
a blind alley. Then is considerable evidence that juveniles from
uu iiutnuiionM children are disadvantaged.
broken homes are more likelv t o be
convicted and
sentenced to juvenile institution
not confirm Bowlby's conclusions.
"I he concept of a broken home is by no means a constant factor Con
A£4(»^
Separaami toe relationship of broken home to delinquencv has never
been conclusively demonstrated.’’
tf^tff’fi 2™”” W ” but the r-eqnency and length

adjudged delinquent bv the Juvenile
mb term in Ontario Training School,

w

Delinquent

And th
‘t
who?e statistical table is
to follow
Jrmmng Schools has led Joan Chelsev
to state i
lnTrtant-but jt is not the
p^hJerne
- TABLE C
“ - k;d
•• bhe s^es maternal deprivation as a
ignii
lu;ver a Bnme factor in delinquencv. U
delinquents
.101 e.,her maternal or paternal deprivation ha^ +0 be k;Vmi
as a S‘w“^Hm
behaviour, .she would unhesitantly "elect
tite
Lia. vw... whan me paper now intends to deal.
Ke
o
role of pure paternal pathology in del in­
ine heels of matern.nl
studies.
that
1 earned his ^masculinity, identity and
1 ar
k K^g^-'nS'irom his lather. The role
w
s fa
the iamily helped to temper his feelingfat he
absent or inactive
a
uibst Lutes rh rough
la
happen^ ;
be dise
mur may result.
e<

(To Be Continued)

COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED
MONEY
MANAGEMENT
Income Tax Keducdon
Retirement Income
Familv Protection
Disability Pay Cneq^
Mortgage Redemptim
College Tub ion

mits

TANOUYE

NATIONAL LIFE
OF CANADA
10 St. Mary St923-0916

r
I

I

L