T'other day I made a general plea for assorted sites to get an RSS feed for their site in order to increase their visibility to all concerned (and Tom Elliott agrees)... we all know there are great things happening in this or that corner of the Classical blogosphere, but far, far, far too often they are not conveniently made known not only to 'insiders', but to those outside the field of Classics. Providing an RSS feed is possibly the easiest way for a department/publication/organization to provide that 'outreach' thing. In any event, I just spent a couple of minutes making a list of sites which seriously should be tracking down someone to set up an rss feed for some aspect of their web presence; ecce:

Classical Journal Reviews

Scholia Reviews (might require some reorganization of the page)

Review of Bibilical Literature (heck, you can't even find the reviews on the web unless you get the newsletter)

APA -- 'new' page

CAC -- CCB Archive

CAMWS - news page

ACL -- main page

Classical Association -- news page

Ancient Narrative (a very difficult page to sort through at the best of times)

Akropolis World News -- 'latest news page' specifically

Princeton Stanford Working Papers (would require some organization)

Classics@

First Drafts@Classics@ (how many Classicists know this exists?)

Lampeter Working Papers (ditto)

Social Science Research Network Classics Papers (just came across this myself)

Didaskalia (how may folks know this online journal is being updated?)

I'm sure there are more ...