| UGOBETTI | Italian author of plays including Corruzione al Palazzo di Giustizia (Corruption in the Palace of Justice, 1949) and La fuggitiva (The Fugitive, 1953) (3,5) |
| DARIOFO | Italian author of plays including Accidental Death of an Anarchist 1970 (5,2) |
| ARIA | Handel's "La giustizia," for one |
| GALILEO | First name of the Pisa-born astronomer and physicist who built a telescope and discovered four of Ju |
| JUDO | Modern form of ju-jitsu (4) |
| OLE | Sound of ju-bull-ation? |
| ZODIAC | Astrological signs in palazzo Di accessed |
| MOLIERE | Sobriquet of Jean-Baptiste Poquelin, author of plays including Tartuffe, Dom Juan and The Misanthrope (7) |
| SHERIDAN | Richard Brinsley ___, Anglo-Irish author of plays including The Rivals (1775) and The School for Scandal (1777) (8) |
| LEBRUN | A founding member of the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture noted for his paintings on the ceiling of the Hall of Mirrors in the Palace of Versailles (2,4) |
| NICHOLASROWE | English author of plays including Tamerlane (1702) and The Fair Penitent (1703); Poet Laureate 1715-18 (8,4) |
| JOEORTON | English author of plays including Entertaining Mr Sloane (1964) and Loot (1965) (3,5) |
| OUDRY | French rococo painter and tapestry designer who drew inspiration from the fables of Jean de La Fontaine for his paintings for the apartment of Louis XV's son, the Dauphin, in the Palace of Versailles |
| MIRROR | Any one of the reflective objects found in a kaleidoscope or the "Galerie des Glaces" in the Palace of Versailles (6) |
| LOBBY | Members' -; hall in the Palace of Westminster, site of the Churchill Arch (5) |
| INIGO | London-born architect who designed the Banqueting House in the Palace of Whitehall (5,5) |
| LADIESGALLERY | Viewing area created by Charles Barry in the Palace of Westminster after the 1834 fire |
| RENO | "Absolute Power: The Legacy of Corruption in the Clinton-___ Justice Department" by David Limbaugh ( |
| VALLEINCLAN | Who was a member of the Spanish Generation of '98 and wrote plays, including Bohemian Lights (1920) |
| OEILDEBOEUF | Small round window or an octagonal vestibule in the Palace of Versailles (4-2-5) |