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Examples
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The application of the Treaty of London, furthermore, would be at the expense, chiefly, of the Jugoslavs, that is, a small nation.
Woodrow Wilson and the World War A Chronicle of Our Own Times. Charles Seymour 1924
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The Jugoslavs remember very well the German occupation in the last great war.
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Inside of half an hour all the flags had disappeared because the Jugoslavs dislike the Italians.
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Futhermore, the Jugoslavs are very strongly opposed because if Hungary had a Catholic King, there might be a Croat attempt to secede from Jugoslavia and join Hungary, or the Croats might adopt the same policy as Hungary and choose Victor Emmanuel for King.
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Jugoslavs in the suburbs and the non-Italian hinterland.
Public Opinion Walter Lippmann 1931
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The nationalistic ambitions of the Rumanians, of the Jugoslavs, of the Czechoslovaks, and of the Poles were aroused to such an extent that conflicts could hardly be avoided.
Woodrow Wilson and the World War A Chronicle of Our Own Times. Charles Seymour 1924
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Even assuming that justice demanded as strong a stand for the Chinese as Wilson had taken for the Jugoslavs, the practical importance of the Shantung question in Europe was of much less significance.
Woodrow Wilson and the World War A Chronicle of Our Own Times. Charles Seymour 1924
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But Italian opinion had been steadily aroused by a chauvinist press campaign to demand not merely the application of the Treaty of London but the annexation of Fiume, which the treaty assigned to the Jugoslavs.
Woodrow Wilson and the World War A Chronicle of Our Own Times. Charles Seymour 1924
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Wherever the issue was clean-cut, as for example between the selfish nationalism of the Italians in their Adriatic demands and the claim to mere economic life of the Jugoslavs, the old rule which granted the spoils to the stronger power was vigorously protested.
Woodrow Wilson and the World War A Chronicle of Our Own Times. Charles Seymour 1924
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Carl seemed sincerely anxious to make sacrifices for peace and was urged by liberal counselors, such as Förster and Lammasch, in whom the Allies had confidence, to meet many of the demands of his discontented Slav subjects by granting autonomy to the Czechs, Poles, and Jugoslavs.
Woodrow Wilson and the World War A Chronicle of Our Own Times. Charles Seymour 1924
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