But there are times one hankers for Mom's spaghetti and meatballs, the kind of Italian-American cooking on which many of us were at least partially weaned.
42.
A sizable segment of Major's Conservative Party still hankers for the glory days when England defined itself in terms of roast beef and empire and contempt for its Continental European neighbors.
43.
Though it has finally relented and renamed its $ 50, 000 Saturday night grand prix for New Jersey rather than the tonier New York, sentimentalists still hanker for a return to Manhattan.
44.
Many Russians, for their part, still hanker for the certainties, real or imagined, of the past : tradition, authority and unity, rather than experiment, competition and pluralism.
45.
Travelers hanker for a genuine, unique ethnic experience, but that's increasingly elusive in a globalized world where you can get good Chinese food in Iceland and Icelandic food in Tbilisi.
46.
Libertarians hanker for a return to the minimalist government that the United States had for its first 150 years, until FDR turned the land of the free into the land of the interventionist state.
47.
If the Met hankers for site-specificity, perhaps it should, as has been suggested, invite artists to organize small exhibitions from its vast holdings rather than build aliens on the roof.
48.
It did make me hanker for the days when you opened out of town and worked out the kinks, but I never felt we were outside the envelope as far as technical problems were concerned,
49.
A show that is by turns benign and alarming, " Post-Pastoral " is a come-on and a cautionary tale for those who hanker for the joys of rural life.
50.
I'm at the piano, writing a satirical march titled " Nasty Little War " _ a warmongering crowd hankers for a chance to obliterate an enemy they only think they know: