PP, meanwhile, likes to hark back to tax cuts when it ran Spain in the late 1990s.
These reports hark back to an era that never was, when the NYSE policed its own house.
Inside the highly secure Cookson factory in Birmingham's jewellery quarter many machines hark back to the firm's long heritage.
Perhaps: but few Democrats now in office hark back to the Reagan precedent.
For parallels, hark back to what happened when TV sets replaced radios in homes or when PCs replaced mainframes in offices.
Fail Safe used live techniques to hark back to the mood as well as the technical constraints of early television.
Many of its complaints hark back to those of foreign companies that entered China at the dawn of the reform era.
And they are often reminiscent of a specific period or practice: Soft-hanging jackets that hark back to working-men's clubs in '50s London.
Some sights hark back to before European settlement in 1788, but the vast majority are tied to arts, education and the fight for indigenous rights.
Along with a Camelot style sense, America will embrace fashions that hark back to the trying economic times of the Great Depression, Fisher predicts.
Sculptures and cultural artifacts in the same room hark back to more traditional African forms even as they reflect the continent's encounter with Europe as well.
But it looks set to air the views of those who hark back to the years between the two world wars, when conservatives ran Hungary.
These principles hark back to the things that made the American economy the greatest in the world in the years before the Fed: the Constitution and the gold standard.
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In Pyongyang, the rhythms of life hark back to a previous century: the city goes dark at night, and the most common way of getting around town is by foot.
All of this makes me hark back to May 2007, when I gave an acceptance speech on this issue following my selection to receive the PRSA-NY John Hill Award for Distinguished Achievement.
Both films hark back to a more somber, measured pace and muted palette, a time when movies weren't so desperate to rush us off our feet and sought to engage the mind -- not overload the senses.
Some misty-eyed commentators hark back to the honest days of the 1970s, when the revelation that his wife held a few thousand dollars in a then-illegal overseas bank account was enough to make the prime minister, Yitzhak Rabin, resign.
It has even been suggested that the link may hark back to prehistoric times, when humans stored up on fat during the summer months when food was plentiful and they slept less as a result of the shorter nights.
Egypt's 8m Christians, about 10% of the population, are understandably anxious not least because, to get elected, Mr Morsi will need the support not just of the Brothers but also of the Salafists, a far more worrying band of Islamists who hark back to the puritanism of the Prophet Muhammad's era and who have amassed an alarming degree of popular support in the new Egypt.
Only a few years after the Great War turned the United States into a world power, he set out to shrink the size and reach of its government, to hark back instead of race forward.
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