| MOSHE | Later known as Israel's defence minister, Captain ... Dayan was injured in the eye when a bullet fir |
| MOSHEDAYAN | Israel's Defence Minister during the 1967 and 1973 wars, visually memorable because of an eye patch (5,5) |
| ONSHORE | No horse was injured in the making of this direction towards land (7) |
| AMY | _ Mitchell, was injured in the crush at Peggy's nightclub (3) |
| RETINA | Get one in the eye when 'E is involved in a train wreak (6) |
| ESCAPE | 1980 Rupert Holmes song that was a Number 1 hit in America, later known as "The Pina Colada Song" |
| EDOMITES | Descendants of the biblical Esau who lived south of the Dead Sea around the 13th century BC; later known as the Idumaeans (8) |
| LIPREADER | He won't look you in the eye when you you speak to him (3-6) |
| GHOST | The Rolls-royce 40/50 car was built from 1906 to 1925, later known as the Silver ----- (5) |
| CULPEPER | English apothecary and botanist who wrote The English Physitian (later known as the Complete Herbal) (8) |
| GUYGIBSON | RAF wing commander who led Operation Chastise, later known as the Dam Busters, raid in 1943 |
| GIBSON | RAF wing commander who led Operation Chastise, later known as the Dam Busters, raid in 1943 (3,6) |
| GUY | RAF wing commander who led Operation Chastise, later known as the Dam Busters, raid in 1943 (3,6) |
| ASHTON | Moira Shearer created the role of Cinderella for the Sadler's Wells Ballet in 1948 as Margot Fonteyn was injured; the choreography was by Frederick ... |
| ORD | Richard ..., Sunderland defender who moved to QPR in 1998 but was injured in training and never played for them (3) |
| LEERED | Gave the eye when the Spaniard returned on a strange deer (6) |
| LASALLE | Robert Cavelier, sieur de ... ..., explorer who claimed the region later known as Louisiana, US for |
| ANGELICA | Dales youngster who was injured in a recent car crash (8,4) |
| KING | Dales youngster who was injured in a recent car crash (8,4) |
| ALICANTE | Port city of SE Spain founded by the ancient Greeks as Akra Leuke ('white peak') and later known by the Romans as Lucentum (8) |