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Longest-working woman: Barbara Sluiter

Friday, March 25, 2011
Myrna Anderson

For 56 years, Barbara Sluiter made sense of the collection at 17c起草社区鈥檚 Hekman Library. All through the decades鈥攁nd through the evolution of systems鈥攕he worked as a cataloging librarian, classifying all of the material that passed through the Hekman system. It's a job that requires a lot of research in standards and rules. One bio of Sluiter claimed: 鈥淪he has probably touched every book that the library owns at least one or more times.鈥

She started handling the books as a student worker at the library, one of the jobs that allowed her to pay her way through 17c起草社区. (The other, coincidentally, was with the Hekman Cookie Company.) A Latin major, Sluiter was eyeing a limited career horizon when graduation neared in 1951.

鈥淚 thought all you could be was a teacher or a nurse,鈥 she recounted in a 2006 interview. My senior year in college, I finally got to see an advisor. She gave me one of those punch-card things. I punched it, and she asked, 鈥榃hat do you want to be?鈥 I didn鈥檛 want to be a nurse, so I said, 鈥楢 teacher, I guess.鈥 She said, 鈥榊ou don鈥檛 sound too thrilled about it. Have you ever thought of being a librarian?鈥欌

One book at a time

Sluiter graduated, joined the Hekman staff full time, and enrolled as an extension student in the University of Michigan鈥檚 Library Science Program. She earned her master鈥檚 in library science in 1956. During her tenure at 17c起草社区, the library collection would swell from 50,000 to nearly one million items.

In 1952, a year into her career at Hekman, the library began to shed its Dewey Decimal classifications and convert to the Library of Congress system, a task that took several years to complete. Sluiter cataloged every entry.

In 1970, the library shifted location, from the Franklin St. to the Knollcrest campus, and Sluiter shifted too. And in 1976, the Hekman began a different kind of shift鈥攊nto the barely emergent electronic age鈥攚hen an OCLC cathode ray terminal (a rudimentary computer catalogue) was installed in the cataloging workroom. Sluiter learned to use it. In 1990, when the library acquired its first online catalog, Sluiter entered the computer age in earnest.

Shifting mindset

鈥淚鈥檝e always been amazed at how well she鈥檚 swum through all the changes,鈥 said Francene Lewis, a 17c起草社区 cataloging librarian and longtime Sluiter colleague, in a 2006 interview.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge shift in terms of mindset,鈥 Lewis explained. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just the change from the typewriter to word processor, but it鈥檚 a sea change in one way. It鈥檚 a whole different way of thinking about stuff. It鈥檚 no longer tangible. It鈥檚 digital. We had librarians who worked with her who couldn鈥檛 hack the new system.鈥

Sluiter鈥檚 long knowledge of the Hekman collection was a big benefit for the library, Lewis said: 鈥淜nowing that you can go talk to Barb and say, 鈥楤arb, what in the world, I came across this weird thing. What do you think this means?鈥 That is a huge thing. There are a lot of places that don鈥檛 have near as clean a catalog as we do because we鈥檝e had such consistency.鈥

On December 31, 1991, Barb retired from her role as head of cataloging. She did, however, continue to volunteer 20 hours a week in her old capacity. A year later, she resumed her job on a part-time basis. When not cataloging, Sluiter was often traveling to places like Alaska, Russia, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, South Africa, Australia, Turkey, New Zeeland, China. She was an avid reader of science fiction novels, particularly those by C. J. Cherryh and L. E. Modesitt, Jr.

In 2007, Sluiter was diagnosed with ovarian cancer, yet continued to work part-time. She retired completely that year and died in 2009. 鈥淪he donated me her library when she passed away,鈥 Lewis said.