"Howards End" daughter / WED 6-10-26 / Landon who ran against F.D.R. in 1936 / Cousin of a flugelhorn / Notes of appreciation, in online parlance / Motivator, of a sort / ___ House, residence for visiting dignitaries in Washington / Only player on three victorious teams in this puzzle
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
Constructor: David J. Kahn and Ethan Quigley
Relative difficulty: Medium
THEME: WORLD CUP WINNERS (7D: Global "club" with only eight members, each of which appears in circled letters with its country code) — just like it says: the country codes for the only eight countries ever to win the World Cup can be found in the eights sets of three circled squares inside today's grid:
Theme answers:
- BRAWL (4A: Big dust-up [1958, 1962, 1970, 1994, 2002]) 🇧🇷
- AFFRAY (18A: Big dust-up [1998, 2018]) 🇫🇷
- WAR GOD (24A: Mars, notably [1978, 1986, 2022]) 🇦🇷
- TAURUS (36A: Cinco de Mayo birth, e.g. [1930, 1950]) 🇺🇾
- GERWIG (43A: "Lady Bird" director Greta [1954, 1974, 1990, 2014]) 🇩🇪
- NARITA (50A: Japan Airlines hub [1934, 1938, 1982, 2006]) 🇮🇹
- AVENGE (61A: Get back for [1966]) 🏴
- ESPYS (69A: Awards for Shohei Ohtani and Caitlin Clark [2010]) 🇪🇸
- (bonus answer) PELE (56D: Only player on three victorious teams in this puzzle)
Alfred Mossman Landon (September 9, 1887 – October 12, 1987) was an American oilman and politician who served as the 26th governor of Kansas from 1933 to 1937. A member of the Republican Party, he was the party's nominee in the 1936 presidential election, and was defeated in a landslide by incumbent president Franklin D. Roosevelt. The margin of victory in the electoral college was the largest of Roosevelt's four elections to the office of president, as Landon won just 8 electoral votes to Roosevelt's 523. Landon died on October 12, 1987, becoming the only presidential candidate from either of the major parties to live to the age of 100 until Jimmy Carter in 2024, and is to date the only Republican candidate to do so. [...] The 1936 Republican National Convention selected Landon as the Republican Party's presidential nominee. He proved to be an ineffective campaigner and carried just two states in the election, neither of which was Kansas despite him being the sitting governor of that state. After the election, he left office as governor and never sought public office again. Later in life, he supported the Marshall Plan and President Lyndon B. Johnson's Great Society programs. He gave the first in a series of lectures, now known as the Landon Lecture Series, at Kansas State University. Landon lived to the age of 100 and died in Topeka, Kansas, in 1987. His daughter, Nancy Kassebaum, represented Kansas in the United States Senate from 1978 to 1997. (wikipedia)
Bullets:
- 34D: Motivator, of a sort (NUDGER) — what are we doing here? Come on.
- 31A: Little dust-up (SPAT) — still with the "dust-ups"?! Why?!
- 54D: "Howards End" daughter (EVIE) — this is where the puzzle gets whatever difficulty it has: in proper nouns of obscure origins. Kinda dicey to cross a two fictional women at a vowel (EVIE / MIRIAM), but I supposed that "I" was eventually inevitable (I thought maybe Mrs. Maisel was a MARIAM, but I've yet to meet or hear of an EVAE, so "I" it was!
- 50A: Japan airlines hub [1934, 1938, 1982, 2006] (NARITA) — weird to have ITALY hidden in a clue that is explicitly JAPANESE. I think it's better when the country-containing answers have nothing to do with specific countries. These are the minute aesthetic considerations I think about when I look over puzzles. This particular issue may not, in fact, be worth fretting over, but it's something that would irk me a little if this were my puzzle. But what do I know? I'm just a dog (70A: Stereotypical dog's name).
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