you wouldn't
The title of a newspaper article should be enclosed in quotation marks.
Put the title in quotes.
It should be in quotation marks.
For titles of films, use italics to show the title is a standalone work. If italics are not possible (such as in handwriting), underline the title instead.
A song title should be punctuated by using quotation marks around the title. For example, "Bohemian Rhapsody" by Queen.
Since Newsweek is the proper name/title of a publication, it should appear in italic letters as shown above when these are available, otherwise underlined.
The editor's role and right is to correct, punctuate, amend or reject any article or contribution by the contributor
The title of an article is also called the heading, or it may be called the headline if it is an important newspaper article.
All words apart from articles, conjunctions and prepositions should be capitalized.
What a good title is will depend on what aspect of dance your article is about.
No, underlining the title of an article makes it look like a hyperlink, emboldening the title would be best.
The title comes from what you've written, not before. If you wrote an article about losing history, then it's a good title. Finish the article first, and the title will come out of what you wrote.