Word: yugoslav
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...along the route were small units of Tito's men. Fifteen minutes out of Trieste I saw a convoy of Indian troops moving slowly into the hills, and a few minutes later bumped into a company of Yanks from the 91st Division being directed to new positions by Yugoslav sentries who stood fascinated by the flow of vehicles...
...occurred during the first two and a half weeks-a group of Tito's men one night jumped an American soldier and stole his rifle. Colonel Rudolph W. Broedlow, commanding the regiment, forbade any retribution. Later, when Broedlow calmly shifted his troops east of the Isonzo River, the Yugoslavs asked how come the Yanks were penetrating "Yugoslav territory." Broedlow said his orders carried him just so far, that was where he was going, and furthermore he hoped the Yugoslavs wouldn't give him any trouble. They didn...
...Very Poor Situation." Gorizia is headquarters for a regiment of the U.S. 91st Infantry Division, and is also a large Yugoslav military center. Later I went with other correspondents to see the Yugoslav commissar for Gorizia, whose offices were in the town's swankiest building. Ushered in with snappy saluting, we discovered an educated young man. However, when he learned the purpose of our visit-to get his reaction to the penetration of his lines-he quickly excused himself, and sent in eight bottles of beer. With the beer came an older, baldheaded, bug-eyed captain, who obviously...
Driving up through the incredibly beautiful mountain country toward Caporetto, we passed many small Yugoslav convoys moving north. They were travelling in groups of 50 or 60, some on foot, some in long, horse-drawn wagons. The Partisans looked at us with dull, tired eyes. One of these groups had four 37-mm. antitank guns-the only artillery I saw on the whole trip...
Along the Isonzo, every cluster of peasant houses sported a half-dozen flags, both Italian and Yugoslav. The flags were made of silk from parachutes we had used to drop food and supplies to the Partisans when they were fighting the Germans. On every building there were red stars and signs reading: "Tukaj je Jugoslavia" (This is Yugoslavia) and "Zivjo Tito" (Long live Tito...