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Answer for the clue "Gets lucky with one's car downtown, say ", 5 letters:
parks

Alternative clues for the word parks

Usage examples of parks.

Unless summer school had claimed them, the kids were all out at the parks or swimming pools, trying to stay cool and keep from being bored.

It is an exceptionally hot, dry summer, and the parched grasses that fill the empty parks and push through the cracks in the concrete bum readily.

Parks: The Magazine of the National Parks and Conservation Association.

It was the lone voice fighting not only to keep the national parks for the people but also to keep them wild, because there was ever a hue and cry to develop park areas or to sell off mining or lumber rights to the highest bidder.

Others wanted every possible hazard of the parks eliminated by boardwalks, guardrails, fences, signs, and signposts every few feet, despite the fact that every known and unknown hazard could never be completely eliminated by structures or regulations any more than traffic hazards could be eliminated from the L.

West, the great natural resources of the national parks, or so his co-travelers have told us.

This strange place must be one of the many destinations on the national parks tour.

But there were other buses, literally hundreds coming and going along the national parks route.

Jessica had already discussed the fact that two of the victims now had been passengers on vacation buses that toured the national parks, a third victim had worked in one of the parks, and that this seemed the only tenuous thread connecting the various victims.

Still, of late, along with fire-related deaths in and around the parks, there had been a rash of deaths this year like nothing the major parks had ever faced before.

Savage, rarely-photographed man of mystery, was caught by the camera today as he met Edward Ellston Parks, the mysterious international archaeologist as the latter landed from the S.

Edward Ellston Parks, or Calico Parks--whichever you want to call him--gave it to me to classify, then turn over to a museum.

Edward Ellston Parks occupied a discreet three-room suite on the twelfth floor.

Ellston Parks was a large, burly man with the body of a bear, the benign face of a man who might have spent his life taking care of little children.

Savage listened to the clicking noise which indicated Edward Ellston Parks, in his twelfth-floor suite, had replaced the telephone receiver on the hook.