Four people (William, Ken, Ivan, and Pamela) with last names Valdez, Jones, Ewing, and Dworsky, each sold a number of dogs.
Each person was of a different occupation: postal worker, undergraduate student, kicker, and xylophone player.
If each person sold one of the following amounts of dogs, (4, 25, 6, and 10) can you figure out the first name, last name, and how many dogs each person sold?
The undergraduate student, the person who sold 10 dogs, and Ken don't like sushi.
Dworsky isn't the xylophone player or the person who sold 4 dogs.
William, and Valdez often watch fights at the postal worker's place.
William is not the person who sold 4 dogs, nor has the last name Valdez.
The xylophone player isn't William Dworsky.
Pamela and Jones once dated the kicker.
William, who is not Jones, is the postal worker's cousin.
Ken, and Valdez often watch fights at the kicker's place.
The person who sold 25 dogs, Jones and William all went to the The person who sold 25 dogs, William, and the undergraduate student went to the movies together.
The person who sold 25 dogs, William, and the undergraduate student went to the movies together.
The person who sold 10 dogs, Valdez, and the postal worker have known each other for years.
The person who sold 6 dogs, Dworsky, and the postal worker have known each other for years.
Jones and Pamela aren't the person who sold 25 dogs.
Pamela went with Dworsky to the amusement park one day.
The person who was the undergraduate student. All four people are mentioned in this clue.
The kicker, whose first name is William, wasn't the person who sold 25 dogs.
The kicker, who sold 10 dogs, isn't Valdez.
Val
Jon
Ewi
Dwo
pos
und
kic
xyl
4
25
6
10
Wil
Ken
Iva
Pam
4
25
6
10
pos
und
kic
xyl
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!