Panel Session 3 Serving Diverse Communities/Building Diverse Collections Sunday p.m., 7 March 1998 Co-Moderators: Ross Day, Associate Museum Librarian, Robert Goldwater Library, Metropolitan Museum of Art; and Andrs Riedlmayer, Bibliographer/Islamic Art, Fine Arts Library, Harvard University Panelists: Ray Anne Lockard, Head Librarian, Frick Fine Arts Library, University of Pittsburgh Andrs Riedlmayer, Bibliographer/Islamic Art, Fine Arts Library, Harvard University Claudia Hill, Original and Special Materials Cataloger for Avery Librarys Art and Architecture Collections, Columbia University Alfred E. Willis, Head, Art and Architecture Library, University of California, Los Angeles While the issue of "diversity" has most often been addressed in the professional community in terms of staffing, the panelists were asked to address how the marginalization of certain kinds of materials, certain forms of access, or certain kinds of users through the practices of daily library operations militates against cultural and linguistic diversity. Ray Anne Lockard began the inquiry with an investigation of the reference tools and sources commonly available in our libraries. As the focus of art and architectural historical studies has expanded in scope to include cultural studies, gay studies, womens studies, and cultural production worldwide, the inadequacies of current reference tools to address these areas has become more pronounced. Ray Anne selected three geocultural areas Africa, Asia, and Canada for illustration. In each instance the tool, either by design or by oversight, fails to cover one of these three major scholarly foci be it the