You use italics
It is more common in journalism to use italics for the title of a newspaper. This helps differentiate the title from the rest of the text and conforms to AP style guidelines.
You can either use italics or an underline.
no use italics
It is common to use italics for the title of a statue. This helps emphasize the title and make it stand out within a text.
It is correct to either use italics or to underline. Be consistent throughout your essay, however.
The names of newspapers, magazines and other journals should be italicized. If italics are not available, underline if handwritten or use quotations marks.
Quotations for article titles. Italics and underlining are for full books - and the titles of journals.
Use Bold, Italics or underline it.
yes - or use italics
usually you use italics...like this
No, you do not have to underline newspaper article titles when summarizing them. Instead, you can use quotation marks or simply capitalize the title for clarity.
No. Use italics or underline (I believe italics is the most current format).
To be gramatically correct, yes. You do italicize the title of a movie. (As well as books.) But if you're using something that can't use italics (such as a typewriter), you're supposed to underline it.