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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Selected Works

Maggie Mason Smith

2019

Articles 1 - 10 of 10

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

National Coming Out Week, Maggie Mason Smith Oct 2019

National Coming Out Week, Maggie Mason Smith

Maggie Mason Smith

Friday, October 11 is National Coming Out Day, a celebration of coming out as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer.

Clemson is hosting a week-long National Coming Out celebration; as part of this, check out the book display in the Cooper Library lobby to read both fiction and nonfiction works with coming out as a core aspect of the plot.


Two Can Keep A Secret, Maggie Mason Smith Sep 2019

Two Can Keep A Secret, Maggie Mason Smith

Maggie Mason Smith

No abstract provided.


Escaping From Houdini, Maggie Mason Smith Sep 2019

Escaping From Houdini, Maggie Mason Smith

Maggie Mason Smith

No abstract provided.


One Day On Our Blue Planet, Maggie Mason Smith Sep 2019

One Day On Our Blue Planet, Maggie Mason Smith

Maggie Mason Smith

No abstract provided.


Imagine, Maggie Mason Smith Sep 2019

Imagine, Maggie Mason Smith

Maggie Mason Smith

No abstract provided.


Hiding, Maggie Mason Smith Sep 2019

Hiding, Maggie Mason Smith

Maggie Mason Smith

No abstract provided.


Area 51, Maggie Mason Smith Sep 2019

Area 51, Maggie Mason Smith

Maggie Mason Smith

No abstract provided.


The Owls Have Come To Take Us Away, Maggie Mason Smith Sep 2019

The Owls Have Come To Take Us Away, Maggie Mason Smith

Maggie Mason Smith

No abstract provided.


The Marvelous Adventures Of Gwendolyn Gray, Maggie Mason Smith Sep 2019

The Marvelous Adventures Of Gwendolyn Gray, Maggie Mason Smith

Maggie Mason Smith

No abstract provided.


Flags, Tags, And Custom Queues, Grendel Jamal Williams, Maggie Mason Smith, Erika Anderson Mar 2019

Flags, Tags, And Custom Queues, Grendel Jamal Williams, Maggie Mason Smith, Erika Anderson

Maggie Mason Smith

Clemson Libraries have been using ILLiad for more than a decade. Upon recently hosting representatives from OCLC for eventual Tipasa migration, we learned that we currently use flags the way we will need to use tags in the future. As Tipasa will not offer an option for custom queues, which are a major part of our workflow, we will need to adapt tags for use in place of custom queues. This poster will outline our current plan for transforming our workflows after migration.