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FILE - In this Dec. 15, 2016 file photo, Stephen W. Parker, left, co-owner and co-publisher of New Jersey Hills Media Group, listens as Richard Vezza, publisher of the Star-Ledger newspaper, addresses members of the New Jersey Assembly Appropriations Committee, as the committee considers among others, legislation to scrap a requirement that legal notices be published in newspapers, after a Senate budget committee greenlighted the legislation earlier in the day, in Trenton. As classified advertising, once the lifeblood of newspapers, has dried up, one constant has remained: A thick daily listing of government public notices. But legislative fights in New Jersey and elsewhere have put that tradition at risk. (AP Photo/Mel Evans, File)

FILE - In this Dec. 15, 2016 file photo, Stephen W. Parker, left, co-owner and co-publisher of New Jersey Hills Media Group, listens as Richard Vezza, publisher of the Star-Ledger newspaper, addresses members of the New Jersey Assembly Appropriations Committee, as the committee considers among others, legislation to scrap a requirement that legal notices be published in newspapers, after a Senate budget committee greenlighted the legislation earlier in the day, in Trenton. As classified advertising, once the lifeblood of newspapers, has dried up, one constant has remained: A thick daily listing of government public notices. But legislative fights in New Jersey and elsewhere have put that tradition at risk. (AP Photo/Mel Evans, File)

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