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AP Average paid weekday circulation of the nation's 20 largest newspapers for the six-month period ending in March, as reported Monday by the Audit Bureau of Circulations. The percentage changes are from the comparable year-ago period. 1. USA Today, 2,278,022, up 0.2 percent 2. The Wall Street Journal, 2,062,312, up 0.6 percent 3. The New York Times, 1,120,420, down 1.9 percent 4. Los Angeles Times, 815,723, down 4.2 percent 5. New York Post, 724,748, up 7.6 percent 6. New York Daily News, 718,174, up 1.4 percent 7. The Washington Post, 699,130, down 3.5 percent 8. Chicago Tribune, 566,827, down 2.1 percent 9. Houston Chronicle, 503,114, down 2 percent 10. The Arizona Republic, 433,731, down 1.1 percent 11. Dallas Morning News, 411,919, down 14.3 percent 12. Newsday, Long Island, 398,231, down 6.9 percent 13. San Francisco Chronicle, 386,564, down 2.9 percent 14. The Boston Globe, 382,503, down 3.7 percent 15. The Star-Ledger of Newark, N.J., 372,629, down 6.1 percent 16. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 357,399, down 2.1 percent 17. The Philadelphia Inquirer, 352,593, up 0.6 percent 18. Star Tribune of Minneapolis-St. Paul, 345,252, down 4.9 percent 19. The Plain Dealer, Cleveland, 344,704, up 0.5 percent 20. Detroit Free Press, 329,989, down 4.7 percent The Dallas Morning News is reporting for the first time since being censured in 2004 for misstating circulation figures. The Chicago Sun-Times has not yet resumed reporting. Source: Audit Bureau of Circulations.
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