Table of contents : Contents Acknowledgments Introduction PART I: “To Exhibit Truth in an Attractive Form”: An Establishment Press Arrives—1834–1850 1. Ka Lama: “The Light” Is Brought to Hawai‘i 2. The Solemn Responsibility of Dissent 3. The Polynesian: In the Service of America and the Kingdom 4. The English Flag and the English Language 5. God Gives Way to Mammon: The Mahele of 1848 PART II:“Fiery Polemic Contests” for the Public’s Support— 1850–1887 6. The Honolulu Times Welcomes the City of Honolulu 7. The Chinese Arrive 8. A Prophet Without Profit: Fornander Topples Judd 9. The Advertiser Enters History 10. A Hawaiian Nationalist Press Is Born 11. “A New Era Has Dawned”: Sugar Is King 12. The Politics of Health PART III: Nationalists versus the Oligarchy: An Uneven Battle—1887–1899 13. A Pan-Pacific Dream 14. Robert Wilcox, “the Napoleon of Printers’ Lane” 15. Revolution and the Suppression of Freedom of Speech 16. The Republic Burns Down Chinatown PART IV:“Here to Stay”: A U.S. Territory— 1900–1941 17. Annexation and the Pacific Cable 18. The 1909 Strike and the Japanese Language Press 19. Respected Residents Become the Enemy: World War I and the Germans 20. Suppressing the News and Contributing to a Massacre 21. The Three Rs—Reading, ’Riting, and Racism 22. “Reclaiming” Waikîkî for the “Aloha Spirit” 23. Getting Away With Murder: The Massie Case 24. Hilo’s “Bloody Monday”: The Tribune-Herald and the Voice of Labor PART V: “Passed for Publication”— 1941–1945 25. A Wartime Press and the Paradox of Censorship for Freedom 26. AJAs: American Patriots PART VI: The March toward Statehood— the 1940s and 1950s 27. “Dear Joe”: Lorrin Thurston Writes to Joe—Stalin or Farrington? 28. The Honolulu Record and the Art of Muckraking 29. The Hawaii Seven: Journalists in Jeopardy 30. Ka Leo Reports on the Golden Rule 31. Watch Them Grow: Tourism and Suburban O‘ahu 32. Statehood and the Star-Bulletin PART VII :The Turbulent 1960s 33. The Business of Newspapers 34. The Popular Columnist 35. Sports and Journalism: “The Social Fabric” 36. Above Ground: The Battle for Diamond Head 37. Underground: The Battle for Hawai‘i’s Soul 38. Women in the News: From Society to Social Causes PART VIII:From Satellite City Halls to a Satellite Universe— 1970–1976 39. Memories of Maui 40. Corporate Economics and Chain Papers 41. Fighting the Newspapers to a Draw: Frank Fasi and the Dailies 42. The Public Opinion Poll 43. Anger and Wit: The Political Cartoon 44. Hawaiian Sovereignty and a Satellite Universe, 1976 Bibliography Index About the Author