Four people (Y.C., Tammy, George, and Marie) with last names Nagowski, Borris, Lindros, and Clemens, each sold a number of yellow stones.
Each person was of a different occupation: rear admiral, lawyer, undergraduate student, and teacher.
If each person sold one of the following amounts of yellow stones, (8, 19, 23, and 17) can you figure out the first name, last name, and how many yellow stones each person sold?
Tammy, Nagowski, and Marie were not the person who sold 8 yellow stones.
George and Nagowski once dated the lawyer.
The lawyer isn't Tammy or the person who sold 8 yellow stones.
The person who sold 17 yellow stones, Lindros, and the undergraduate student have known each other for years.
The undergraduate student isn't Marie or the person who sold 19 yellow stones.
The person who sold 8 yellow stones, Borris and Marie all went to the teacher's surprise birthday party.
The person who sold 23 yellow stones, Tammy, and the undergraduate student went to the movies together.
The person who sold 19 yellow stones, Borris and George all went to the teacher's surprise birthday party.
The lawyer isn't Y.C. Nagowski.
Nag
Bor
Lin
Cle
rea
law
und
tea
8
19
23
17
Y.C
Tam
Geo
Mar
8
19
23
17
rea
law
und
tea
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!