The paper is from February 17, 1989 and the headlines are as follows: Inside the masthead of the paper is the headline “$50,000 Reward. Who Destroyed the Maine? $50,000 Reward.” Under the newspaper masthead, the main headline, “Destruction of the War Ship Maine was the Work of an Enemy,” stretches across the entire paper. Under the main headline, printed on both sides of the paper, is the identical sub-headline “50,000 Reward! For the Detection of the Perpetrator of the Maine Outrage!” Under each of these sub-headlines is an article but the print is so small, the reader cannot make it out. In the middle, under the masthead, and between the two identical sub-headings it the additional subheading, “Assistant Secretary Roosevelt Convinced the Explosion was not as Accident.” This is followed with the information “The Journal offers $50,000 Reward for the Conviction of Criminals Who Sent 258 American Sailors to Their Death. Naval Officers Unanimous that the Ship was Destroyed on Purpose.” A) Using the image of the front page and the knowledge you attained from the lesson, identify the headlines that could be described as yellow journalism and explain how these headlines and their stories might have played a major role in U.S. involvement in the Spanish-American War. (4 points)

In 1-2 sentences explain and make it sound like an 7 grader

can you make it shorter plz

shorter plz

The sensational headlines about the USS Maine's destruction may have influenced public opinion, pushing the US towards war with Spain.

make it sound like 7 grader

The big, exciting headlines about the USS Maine getting destroyed might have made people really mad and want to go to war with Spain.

The headline "Destruction of the War Ship Maine was the Work of an Enemy" and the sub-headline "50,000 Reward! For the Detection of the Perpetrator of the Maine Outrage!" could be considered examples of yellow journalism. These sensationalized headlines and stories might have played a major role in U.S. involvement in the Spanish-American War by stirring up public outrage and anger, leading to a desire for revenge against Spain for the alleged attack on the USS Maine.

The headline "Destruction of the War Ship Maine was the Work of an Enemy" and the sub-headline "50,000 Reward! For the Detection of the Perpetrator of the Maine Outrage!" are examples of yellow journalism. These sensationalized stories may have convinced the public to support going to war with Spain after the USS Maine was destroyed.