Korzo means street, usually the main street, which serves as a promenade ['korzirati' = to walk along the promenade]. Until the late 1970s, 'going to korzo' was a term for nightlife for both young and old in most Yugoslav cities, including the mining and industrial city of Tuzla. For the young people without money ('kokuze'), Korzo, as a large hangout, offered an excellent (free!) opportunity to meet and have fun in the evenings.
Tuzla's Korzo (present-day Turalibega Street) ran from the Kino (cinema) 'Centar', where the statues of two great Tuzla artists, Meša Selimović and Ismet Mujezinović, now stand, to the then City Café (Gradska kafana) on Kapija Square. People would walk, usually in pairs, in four rows of various ages, in the same direction, back and forth, for at least an hour.