-IN THE ORIGINAL REGISTERED LETTER TO PETER WORTHINGTON, THE NOTE TO HIM WAS ABOVE THE DOCUMENT TITLE AND LIST.
GIVEN THE NOTE'S LENGTH, I CHOOSE TO PUT THE NOTE BELOW THE TITLE HERE...ACCOMPANIED BY THIS NOTE ABOVE BOTH.

________________________

LIST OF CONTENTS FOR THE FEBRUARY 1, 1988 SUBMISSION TO PETER WORTHINGTON, EDITOR, INFLUENCE MAGAZINE:

1) one-page statement to Mr. Peter Worthington, dated January 29, 1988; with these attached copies:

2) through 9):

10) copy of the December 28, 1987 letter from John J. Phelan, Jr.

11) copy of page taken from the January 19, 1988 submission to the Honourable Ms. Pat Carney, containing photocopies of both sides of Acknowledgement of Receipt for December 16, 1987 registered letter #936 to Mr. Pieter W. Botha, PRESIDENT OF SOUTH AFRICA, with note to Ms. Carney at bottom of page.

12) copy of the January 30, 1988 statement to President Jimmy Carter; with List of Contents for the submission on face and attachments according to it included except where to do so would duplicate enclosures here already.


Mr. Worthington: As you'll see by what is said to you in my formal statement to you here, there are now ongoing developments relating to my "International Diplomatic Work...on a direct basis."
Some of them arose in the last few days preceding the date i promised to send this to you on.
And because the central point of the contents here is to help you decide whether sanctions against South Africa are a proper response to apartheid, i decided i'd also include here a copy of my present statement to Jimmy Carter about these developments.
It also obviates the necessity of further clarifying presently the references in enclosure 11) to Senator Robert Dole and my January 14, 1988 registered letter #771 to him, beyond stating that i was in touch with him during the 1978 work because President Carter wanted the representation of American interests in my "International Diplomatic Work...on a direct basis" to be politically multipartisan, and accordingly it contained recommendations for policy development on behalf of both Democrats and Republicans.
And stating that once Senator Edward Kennedy made the trip to South Africa he promised in 1978 he would at an appropriate time in future, i resumed communications with both U.S. senators.