In addition to the units to which Betsy referred, I know of three alternatives: SURVEY PRO (by Apian Software of California) is a very impressive survey research package which is in use by, inter alia, the Glenbow in Calgary, the Canadian Museum of Civilization and (starting next month!) the Canadian War Museum. It has modules for constructing the survey form, a subprogram called ENTRY PRO that lets you run the questionnaire on up to 5 PCs which your visitors (or anyone else!) can use to input responses, and other modules for analyzing data, doing a variety of statistical tests and generating reports, complete with graphics. The survey contruction program is now available in Windows and the whole thing is supposed to be released shortly for Windows in a Beta test version, but Christina and I are still waiting! As it is, the half in Windows, half in DOS status is annoying, but not enough to deter us from using the program. Technical support is reported by one of my colleagues to be good. For information, contact Apian Software, PO Box 1224, Menlo Park CA 949026, voice 415-694-2900, fax 415-694-2904. An alternative is a program an Ottawa dealer asked me yesterday to evaluate. It is a DOS program (soon to be available in WINDOWS) called RAOSOFT SURVEY. It has many of the same features as SURVEY PRO though the survey constuction module is a bit more complicated to use. However, that module APPEARS to be more flexible than SURVEY PRO (which is VERY flexible anyway!). Graphing and crosstabs appear better in RAOSOFT, though I believe it has fewer statistical functions and does not export as a .SYS file (for use by SPSS). Pricing structure is different but when you add in the bits that come packaged with Survey Pro, it is not that much cheaper. For information and a demo diskette, contact: David Hull and Associates Ltd., 5879-191A Street, Surrey BC Canada V3S 7N1, voice 604-576-6460, fax 604-576-6462. Another alternative, where the visitors use telephones to input responses through an 800 number to your host PC, is currently being marketed by the Wyatt consulting group. It was demonstrated by Ray Everett of Wyatt Ottawa at the Evaluation '95 world congress on evaluation in early November 95 in Vancouver. For information, contact your local Wyatt office. Harry Needham Director, Programmes and Operations Canadian War Museum