Four people (Fran, Ken, Amy, and Larry) with last names Quail, Smith, Pettitte, and Dworsky, each gave a number of puzzles.
Each person was of a different occupation: graphic artist, teacher, postal worker, and delivery person.
If each person gave one of the following amounts of puzzles, (9, 20, 4, and 12) can you figure out the first name, last name, and how many puzzles each person gave?
The postal worker isn't Ken or the person who gave 9 puzzles.
Amy, and Quail often watch fights at the delivery person's place.
The postal worker, whose first name is Amy, wasn't the person who gave 20 puzzles.
The person who gave 9 puzzles, Fran, and the postal worker went to the movies together.
Ken, the person who gave 9 puzzles, and the graphic artist go shopping together on Saturdays.
Larry, Pettitte, and the person who gave 4 puzzles each had different dinners last night.
The person who gave 20 puzzles, Smith and Amy all went to the The teacher, who gave 12 puzzles, isn't Dworsky.
The teacher, who gave 12 puzzles, isn't Dworsky.
Fran, and Smith often watch fights at the teacher's place.
The person who gave 12 puzzles, Smith, and the graphic artist have known each other for years.
Pettitte isn't the delivery person or the person who gave 4 puzzles.
Quail and Amy aren't the person who gave 12 puzzles.
The graphic artist, who gave 20 puzzles, isn't Pettitte.
The teacher isn't Fran Quail.
The graphic artist, whose first name is Fran, wasn't the person who gave 12 puzzles.
Qua
Smi
Pet
Dwo
gra
tea
pos
del
9
20
4
12
Fra
Ken
Amy
Lar
9
20
4
12
gra
tea
pos
del
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!