Format your citation in the following manner if you are using Chicago Manual of Style format:
Author's Last Name, First Name. "Title of Article." Name of Newspaper in Italics (City, State Abbreviation), Mon. Day, Year.
For example:
Smith, Kevin. "Brazil Opens to Trade With China." Chicago Gazette (Chicago, IL), Jan. 2, 2009.
Omit the word "the" from the titles of newspapers in your citation. If the newspaper you are citing is widely known or has national readership, you do not need to include the city and state in parentheses. For example:
Smith, Kevin. "Brazil Opens to Trade With China." New York Times, Jan. 2, 2009.
Format your citation in the following manner if you are using MLA format:
Author's Last Name, First Name. "Title of Article." Name of Newspaper in Italics [City, State Abbreviation] Day Mon. Year: Page. Medium of Publication.
For example:
Smith, Kevin. "Brazil Opens to Trade With China." Chicago Gazette [Chicago, IL] 2 Jan. 2009: A3. Print.
Omit the word "the" from the titles of newspapers in your citation. If the newspaper you are citing is widely known or has national readership, you do not need to include the city and state in parentheses. For example:
Smith, Kevin. "Brazil Opens to Trade With China." New York Times 2 Jan. 2009: A3. Print.
If you are citing a specific edition of a paper, make note of this after the date. For example:
Smith, Kevin. "Brazil Opens to Trade With China." Chicago Gazette [Chicago, IL] 2 Jan. 2009 late ed.: A3. Print.
Format your citation in the following manner if you are using APA format:
Author's Last Name, F. (Year, Month Day). Title of article. Name of Newspaper in Italics, pages.
In APA style, include the word "the" in the names of newspapers. The titles of articles should have only the first word capitalized, along with any proper nouns.
For example:
Smith, K. (2009, January 2). Brazil opens to trade with China. The New York Times, p. A3.
If the article extends to more than one page, you must list all pages that the article appears on. For example:
Smith, K. (2009, January 2). Brazil opens to trade with China. The New York Times, pp. A3, C5.