#118 + 13 THE PRESIDENT: QQ. (Unna). Yes. I wonder if you could tell us, sir, when you think the military will begin stockpiling the relatively Clean bomb? THE PRESIDENT: Well, I think that as quickly as they are produced in quantity, they begin to stockpile those. But that does not mean that you can immediately go back over all of your old ones and get them revised. time. That takes But they are stocking whatever the cleanest bomb they have at the moment -- they have stocked up on it. Q. David Sentner, Hearst Newspapers. Mr. President, would you tell us whether correspondence between you and Marshal Zhukov has lapsed? THE PRESIDENT: Well, except for one personal exchange as a polite amenity following the Geneva conference, I have had no direct communication with Admiral Zhukov -- with Marshal Zhukov, I think it was April, 1946. All of the opinions and statements I have ever made to you people about the Marshal were based upon, I have carefully explained, my six months' connection with him in 1945. So, since then, I have had no direct communication with hin. Q. (Sentner). Could you give us any idea of the sub- stance of those past communications, particularly relevant to the current disarmament discussions‘ THE PRESIDENT: Well, I certainly would not want to guess at them now. I would have to go back, because they had nothing to do with -- this is 1946, and that is eleven years ago, and I -- I wouldn't want -- they had nothing to do with disarmament, except that he did have this feeling that America and Russia were the two peoples who should try to devise plans and more or less induce others to conform. But that was, I say, a long time ago and I know nothing about his convictions at the moment. Q. (Smith, United Press). REPRODUCED AT THE DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER LIBRARY END Thank you, Mr. President. AE, ~ "a3 .; Sate aa

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