1. Author Firstname Lastname, "Headline," Newspaper Title, Month day, year.
2. Author Lastname, "Headline."
Author Lastname, Firstname. "Headline." Newspaper Title. Month day, year.
If the city where the newspaper is published is not part of the name of the paper, include it in parentheses, i.e. Daily Tribune (Columbia, Mo.). Do not cite the city separately if it is part of the name, i.e. New York Times does not require the city in parentheses.
1. Carl Hulse and Robert Pear, "Higher Limit for U.S. Insurance on Deposits," New York Times, October 1, 2008, national edition.
2. Hulse and Pear, "Higher Limit for U.S. Insurance."
Hulse, Carl, and Robert Pear. "Higher Limit for U.S. Insurance on Deposits." New York Times, October 1, 2008, national edition.
3. "Developments in North Africa and Across the Middle East," New York Times, April 4, 2011.
4. "Developments in North Africa."
New York Times. "Developments in North Africa and Across the Middle East." April 4, 2011.
Note that the name of the newspaper goes in the author position if there is no stated author.
5. Laura Olson, "New York City Braces as Hurricane Heads Up East Coast," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, August 27, 2011, EBSCO Newspaper Source.
6. Olson, "New York City Braces."
Olson, Laura. "New York City Braces as Hurricane Heads Up East Coast." Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, August 27, 2011. EBSCO Newspaper Source.
7. Warren Richie, "US Supreme Court Opens, Likely to Wade into Health Care Debate," Christian Science Monitor, October 2, 2011, http://www.csmonitor.com.
8. Richie, "US Supreme Court Opens."
Richie, Warren. "US Supreme Court Opens, Likely to Wade into Health Care Debate." Christian Science Monitor, October 2, 2011. http://www.csmonitor.com.
If the URL is overly long it is ok to shorten it to the home page.