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  • International ~ealthAlliance .. Congressman John LaFalce from Buffalo and I than~you, Congressman. The mayors of both Buffalo and Tuzla, than~ you gentleman. Judy Collins, UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador. Sandy Reisenbach, the Vice-president of Warner Brothers
  • the mayors of Tuzla, Bosnia, and Buffalo, N.Y., sign the hospital agreement, I felt pride in our nation's tradition of humanitarian assistance and . , our commitment to democracy in the former Yugoslavia and around the world. . , The hospital partnership
  • in Tuzla, but not very safe to go anywhere else. I couldn't get in to Sarajevo. But I was able to fly out of Tuzla into twobase camps -- Camp Alicia and Camp Bedrock -- to visit with the men and women who were there on the front lines of America's peace
  • , which appear to be taking root. iEven with the busi~st ,of schedules ' that one'can imagine, duripg'his recent trip to Tuzla, the President met with NGO representatives in Bosnia, all of whom are represented in this room.: , I , I' ','" 'i
  • of democracy that' has enabled us to solve !our problems for ~ore than 200 years. I thought about that, visit in Nepal again when I was 1n Bbsn1a w1th my daughter recently. I met w1th civilians from Tuzla and Sarajevo who described what life was like when
  • , in, TUzla,. And; they ,sat in a circle and told me about what their, ' lives had been like during four years of, war C!-nd ,ethnic violence. Doctors and nurses related how they had 'kept rUdimentary' , faciYities opendespiteibeing bombed d~ily. I heard from
  • ' 'of' the lessons and 'legacy of those early Gree,k dem9crats . j . . : ." . . .' , -. . I' ." -., , " I , " " , " • " • , ," ",A few:days' ago, I was' in'.Bo~nia visiting American 'troops 'in ' ,Tuzla who, ,along, with soldiers from many other
  • public/private initiative is the announcement of a partnership joining Buffalo General Hospital of Buffalo, NY with the Tuzla Clinical Center in Tuzla, Bosnia and Herzogovenia. The heads of the partnership hospitals, representatives of U.S. and Bosnia
  • are partoftheNATO . peacekeeping force in Bosnia. It was an unforgettable experience, and I believe I even mentioned ... it when I was here in October. Because I will never forget the feeling I had as I went by helicopter from Tuzla, which was the main American base
  • and extremism 'an4 violence because of propaqanda and the 'stir~inq of emotions,th~t are not rooted in oqr common experience, but are dev~sed ·for someone else's political or commerc,ial advantaqe. ~. listened to the men and women who' came to meet me in Tuzla
  • Tuzla and landed at two outposts, , Camp Bedrock and Camp Al~cia, I saw front of me our very best young people, not unlikelthe young people who are here at Triton trying to make their fut~res as well. I saw men and women. I saw' black and brown and white
  • once prepJed to go to war agrunst each other now stand side by side, securing:a lasting peace together in BoJnia. When I visited our American troops in Tuzla, Bosnia, I was·so pleased to be able also to meet some of the Russian troops who were stationed
  • talked . with our soldiers, not pnly at the main base. in Tuzla but out at two outposts,' Camp Alidia and Camp' Bedrock, I wished. every American could have been with me. Because there they were, young Americans -- black, white, from country and city
  • of strength and hope, not divisiveness: : Shortly after the Dayton Peace Actords, I was in Bosnia. And I met in Tuzla with a group of men and women-primmily wom~n Orthodox Chlistians, Catholic Chlistians, Muslims and even a Jew-who had survived the horrific
  • recent and fresh, about what it means to face that evil and that indifference today. I can remember sittingin a room in Tuzla, shOltly after the Dayton Peace Accords, talking to a group of Bosnians. They were Serbs and Croats and Muslims, although I could