Nostalgic Rumblings
The Ramblings of an Old Man




If you appreciate the lists and websites, please consider contributing to their maintenance.


Categories


August 2006
S M T W T F S
« Jul   Sep »
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  


Search:


Contact Webmaster


Links


Meta

  • RSS 2.0

    The main feed; in a news aggrigator, it's the news items, in a podcast client, it's the media files


  • Comments RSS 2.0

    This is the feed for global comments (any comment made to the board); each entry has a seperate comments feed, too


© 2006 L.O.F. Communications;
All Rights Reserved

Times listed are U.S. Eastern

We don't need no much stinkin' CSS...


 
Please Keep These Pages Free; Check Out Our Sponsors by Clicking the Banner!

Your Advertisement Could Be On This Page!

Your Advertisement Could Be On This Page!


 

8/12/2006


‘Undercover Kitten’ dies in traffic accident

Filed under: News — Charlie Summers @ 11:48 pm

From CNN: ‘Undercover Kitten’ dies in traffic accident.

Fred, a tabby who found fame as the “Undercover Kitten,” has died in a traffic accident, the Brooklyn district attorney’s office said Friday.


Jonathan Thomas - Episode 21

Filed under: Old-Time Radio — Charlie Summers @ 2:20 pm

Episode #21 - Jonathan Thomas grows large and small.

(Thanks to Kermyt Anderson for the one-line episode descriptions!)

As you can see, we’re trying something new here, thanks to some software we’ve installed during the update. If you’d like to listen to the program, simply click the Play button below, on the Flash-based media player!

Please post any comments, positive or negative, or problem reports to the blog here, or to me directly using the “Contact the Webmaster” button over on the sidebar. I’d appreciate knowing what you think of our new podcasting system.

icon for podpress  Jonathan Thomas - Episode 21: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download


Your Life as an Open Book

Filed under: News — Charlie Summers @ 12:14 pm

From The New York Times: Your Life as an Open Book

From the article: “As it stands now, little with regard to search queries is private. No laws clearly place search requests off-limits to advertisers, law enforcement agencies or academic researchers, beyond the terms that companies set themselves.”

If you aren’t frightened yet, you just don’t understand the problem.