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SLUG Magazine 317 Bike Issue. SLUG Magazine’s core focus is the Salt Lake community. However, SLUG is also known for its interview-based features with well-known personalities of underground music culture, like Henry Rollins, Michael Gira of Swans, and Dale Crover of Melvins—as well as local Utah bands such as The Stench, SubRosa, Cult Leader, and many others.
Death by Salt II, released March 3, 2006, is a double-disc offering of 42 Utah bands and is SLUG Magazine's follow-up to 2004's triple-CD local band comp. The quality of the tracks submitted this time was higher and the selection process more rigorous, making the final project even more polished, cohesive and stellar than before.
Scratch (magazine) Screamer Magazine; The Second Line; Side Stage Magazine; Sing Out! Singing News; Skyscraper (magazine) Slash (fanzine) Slug and Lettuce (fanzine) SLUG (magazine) Sluggo! Sound & Vision (magazine) Soundboard (magazine) The Source; Source: Music of the Avant Garde; Spin (magazine) Stereophile; Streetsound; Suburban Punk 'SUP ...
A. Magazine; Ad Astra (magazine) Adbusters; Agenda Diplomática; Ajax Life; ... SLUG (magazine) Smut (comics) The Snap Magazine; Soap Opera Weekly; Socialist Studies ...
In newspaper editing, a slug is a short name given to an article that is in production. The story is labeled with its slug as it makes its way from the reporter through the editorial process. The AP Stylebook prescribes its use by wire reporters (in a "keyword slugline") as follows: "The keyword or slug (sometimes more than one word) clearly ...
The pair took the names Slug and D-Spawn, respectively, as rapper names. They initially performed under the name "Mental Subjects", before changing the name to "A Rhythmic Culture", and finally settling on "Urban Atmosphere". Originally, Spawn performed as the rapper, with Slug acting as DJ. Eventually Spawn convinced Slug to start rapping as well.
The use of the MAG-7 with these cartridges yields an effective range of 45 yards (41.1 m), although they have a proven lethality to 90 yards (82 m). [4] The MAG-7 also has a detachable, top-folding sheet metal stock. There were two models initially manufactured—the original MAG-7, and a civilian-legal model, called the MAG-7 M1.
Although the more powerful .454 Casull wildcat cartridge was announced in 1959, [5] the .44 Magnum was the most powerful production cartridge until the 1980s when the first production .454 Casull revolver was produced. [31] The .44 Magnum was also bought and used by the character Travis Bickle in the 1976 film Taxi Driver during his assault on ...