INFERIORITY COMPLEX
A SIGN OF THE NEW WORLD. “I was told coming over on the ship that I should recognise colonials by their inferiority complex,” .said Mrs. I. L. Kandel, who arrived in Auckland on Friday morning by the Monterey. “I replied,” Mrs. Kandel said, to an interviewer, “by telling my informer that an inferiority complex was a part of the new world. It is only in the old world that people feel that they know everything and can sit back.” Mrs. Kandel, accompanied by her daughter, Helen, is in New Zealand with her husband, Dr. Kandel, who will attend the New Educational Fellowship Conference in July and August. “1 was told that New Zealand is very like England,” Mrs. Kandel said, “and am looking forward to spending a quiet time here. I am English, and the intellectual ferment that is New York is a little tiring. We are going to tour the country before the conference, and see as much of it as we can. 1 am extremely interested in the women's point of view the world over, and hope to study the contribution that Australian and New Zealand women are making to the world’s thought.”
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Bibliographic details
Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 80, Issue 139, 14 June 1937, Page 2
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197INFERIORITY COMPLEX Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 80, Issue 139, 14 June 1937, Page 2
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