Four people (Amy, Edgar, Tammy, and Bill) with last names Galitzer, Usaber, Dworsky, and Forsberg, each owned a number of jacks.
Each person was of a different occupation: undergraduate student, nurse, xylophone player, and florist.
If each person owned one of the following amounts of jacks, (16, 10, 7, and 11) can you figure out the first name, last name, and how many jacks each person owned?
Galitzer isn't the florist or the person who owned 10 jacks.
Tammy, Galitzer, and Amy were not the person who owned 11 jacks.
Amy, who is not Galitzer, is the undergraduate student's cousin.
The person who owned 16 jacks, Forsberg, and the nurse have known each other for years.
Tammy is not the person who owned 16 jacks, nor has the last name Usaber.
Amy, who is not Forsberg, is the nurse's cousin.
Galitzer wasn't the person who owned 16 jacks. Neither did Bill nor the xylophone player.
The florist, whose first name is Amy, wasn't the person who owned 7 jacks.
The person who owned 7 jacks lives in the same building as Dworsky and Tammy.
Tammy, Dworsky, and the person who owned 11 jacks each had different dinners last night.
The florist, who owned 16 jacks, isn't Forsberg.
The undergraduate student isn't Amy Dworsky.
Gal
Usa
Dwo
For
und
nur
xyl
flo
16
10
7
11
Amy
Edg
Tam
Bil
16
10
7
11
und
nur
xyl
flo
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!