Four people (Opie, Larry, Jesse, and Pamela) with last names Harris, Zellar, Quail, and Smith, each sold a number of chocolate bars.
Each person was of a different occupation: engineer, lawyer, undergraduate student, and quack.
If each person sold one of the following amounts of chocolate bars, (1, 0, 18, and 9) can you figure out the first name, last name, and how many chocolate bars each person sold?
The person who sold 0 chocolate bars, Larry, and the engineer went to the movies together.
Larry, Smith, and Opie were not the person who sold 0 chocolate bars.
The quack, whose first name is Jesse, wasn't the person who sold 1 chocolate bars.
Quail isn't the engineer or the person who sold 9 chocolate bars.
The person who sold 9 chocolate bars, Zellar, and the quack have known each other for years.
The person who sold 0 chocolate bars, Harris and Pamela all went to the 's surprise birthday party.
The lawyer, whose first name is Larry, wasn't the person who sold 18 chocolate bars.
Quail wasn't the person who sold 9 chocolate bars. Neither did Pamela nor the lawyer.
Jesse, who is not Zellar, is the undergraduate student's cousin.
The undergraduate student, the person who sold 9 chocolate bars, didn't want a copy of Zellar's book.
The undergraduate student, whose first name is Opie, wasn't the person who sold 18 chocolate bars.
The lawyer isn't Opie Harris.
Har
Zel
Qua
Smi
eng
law
und
qua
1
0
18
9
Opi
Lar
Jes
Pam
1
0
18
9
eng
law
und
qua
Place a N in any square that is a definite "no" and a Y in any square that is a definite "yes". I give up!