Four people (Ken, Bill, Nick, and Tammy) with last names Forsberg, Galitzer, Wallace, and Harris, each sold a number of balls.
Each person was of a different occupation: janitor, engineer, rear admiral, and zookeeper.
If each person sold one of the following amounts of balls, (6, 16, 17, and 5) can you figure out the first name, last name, and how many balls each person sold?
Forsberg and Bill aren't the person who sold 16 balls.
Galitzer isn't the janitor or the person who sold 5 balls.
The engineer, the person who sold 17 balls, didn't want a copy of Harris's book.
The zookeeper, who sold 5 balls, isn't Galitzer.
The person who sold 17 balls, Forsberg and Bill all went to the Harris isn't the janitor or the person who sold 17 balls.
Harris isn't the janitor or the person who sold 17 balls.
Ken and Forsberg once dated the zookeeper.
The person who sold 5 balls is not named Tammy or Wallace.
Wallace sold less balls than the engineer, and more than Bill.
Bill went with Forsberg to the amusement park one day.
The person who was the janitor. All four people are mentioned in this clue.
The rear admiral isn't Ken Galitzer.
The engineer, whose first name is Ken, wasn't the person who sold 6 balls.
For
Gal
Wal
Har
jan
eng
rea
zoo
6
16
17
5
Ken
Bil
Nic
Tam
6
16
17
5
jan
eng
rea
zoo
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!