Honolulu newspapers (24 Oct 94, Honolulu Star Bulletin) carried a New York Times story datelined Winter Park, Florida. The story tells about a bronze statue of Kinjiro Ninomiya (described as a Japanese Horatio Alger) now held at Rollins College. The statue is described as "taken" from Okinawa by an American in 1946 during or just-after Battle of Okinawa. The American officer who took it, then donated it to the college. An Okinawan group is asking for the return of the statue. The college is refusing. I would like to here from Museum people in Florida with DIRECT knowledge of the events involved. It is my experience that news stories so compress information that what comes out in the news, often is not quite what is happening. ============================================================================ Anita Manning / [log in to unmask] Asst. Director, Collections Managmt. / Vice President and Secretary / 808-484-4117 Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum / P. O. Box 19000-A / Honolulu, Hawai'i 96817-0916 / ============================================================================