By Dan Nakano 
Advertiser Staff Writer 
 
Hawaii's other princess-in-waiting - Owana Ka'ohelelani Salazar - plans to 
make a royal pitch to Congress next month to hold hearings to settle questions 
about the legality of the United States' annexation of the Islands and restore 
the monarchy.   
Salazar has long disputed the royal claims of Abigail Kawananakoa, president 
of the
Friends of Iolani Palace board of directors. Kawananakoa is in the middle of 
a palace fight for her presidential title after she reportedly damaged a throne 
when she sat on it for a Life magazine photo session.   
Salazar said Kawananakoa's recent statements - such as one in which she said 
she is "the big cheese" - show an attitude that is out of sync with nobility.
 
"Its sad for me to see this arrogance and be proud of it," she said yesterday 
outside
Iolani Palace.   
Salazar is asking Life magazine to document its claim that Kawananakoa is the 
rightful heir to the Hawaiian throne if the monarchy were to continue. 
Otherwise, Salazar says, Life should retract its story.   
She also feels that with momentum building for the 100th anniversary of the 
annexation, the time is right for Congress to hold hearings on the annexation 
and the monarchy.   
Aug. 12 will be
marked with vigils and marches, not celebration, by hundreds of Native 
Hawaiians. Salazar will be in Washington as part of the Aloha March to observe 
the annexation and plans to visit congressional leaders.   
Hawaii's Sens. Daniel Akaka and Daniel Inouye could not be reached late 
yesterday for comment.   
Some legal experts and Hawaiian activists say that annexation was illegal 
because the Senate in 1897 failed to gain the two-thirds majority to approve a 
treaty of annexation.   
The defeat was influenced in part by 38,000 signatures on a petition of 
Native Hawaiians. Instead, a congressional
joint resolution to annex Hawaii was passed by a simple majority vote. 
  
"It means simply that this kingdom is still here and all that is missing is 
the crown," Salazar said. "My family is the royal family."   
Salazar traces her lineage directly to Keoua Nui, father of Kamehameha the 
Great. The Keoua descendants include Princess Elizabeth Kekaaniau Laanui,m the 
last surviving alumnus of the Royal Boarding School for children eligible to be 
rulers of the kingdom.   
Salazar's family believes that Laanui would have become the rightful heir. 
Laanui had no children, but her brother's only child was Princess Theresa Owana 
Ka'ohelelani, Owana Salazar's great-grandmother.   
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