DOCUMENT Part one contains: A discussion of Interpretive Structural Modeling, the equipment used, strategies for obtaining equipment, a programmer's overview of the software package, a bibliography, documentation of algorithms, and DELTA charts. It is a 205 page report. Part two contains: A printout of the complete Fortran program, 97 pages long. The publisher statement is Univ of Dayton. But this material was also in print as appendix 1 and appendix 2 of a report from U.S. Office of Environmental Education. ====================================================================== ANNOTATION Computer Implementation of Interpretive Structural Modeling was not authored by John Warfield, but I am including it in the Warfield Archive database so it will not get lost in the shuffle. Warfield was the overall editor of the Sourcebook, of which this report was a part. After donations to the GMU and Ariz State libraries, I have found only one copy of part 2 only, don't know if there is still a part 1 or not, but if I find part 1 I expect to keep both documents in JOHN WARFIELD PAPERS FILE DRAWERS, SO THEY WON'T GET LOST. Produced under Subcontract No. 5-22-33 to the U. S. Office of Environmental Education Contract No. 300-700-4028, which was headquartered at the University of Virginia. These Appendices hold the ISM software program and a very well-written User guide, both written at University of Dayton. For political reasons involved with the government contract provisions, this important document had to be subsumed as the. COMPUTER IMPLEMENTATION OF INTERPRETIVE STRUCTURAL MODELING, is the title given exclusively to the APPENDICES to Volume 4 of the OEE contract reports. But after the appendices appeared in the big OEE contract report, the University of Dayton published the two appendices independently, as a separate monograph. The monograph is also titled COMPUTER IMPLEMENTATION OF INTERPRETIVE STRUCTURAL MODELING. On the title page of COMPUTER IMPLEMENTATION OF INTERPRETIVE STRUCTURAL MODELING can be seen the names of all four authors - the names of the four-person team who contributed so heavily to Warfield's contract that their work could never be repaid.