Four people (Amy, Charles, Sean, and Larry) with last names Tavarez, Wallace, Clemens, and Borris, each gave a number of apples.
Each person was of a different occupation: mathematician, zookeeper, kicker, and horse trainer.
If each person gave one of the following amounts of apples, (22, 2, 1, and 21) can you figure out the first name, last name, and how many apples each person gave?
Amy, Tavarez, and the person who gave 2 apples each had different dinners last night.
Tavarez isn't the mathematician or the person who gave 2 apples.
Charles, and Borris often watch fights at the mathematician's place.
Sean, Tavarez, and the person who gave 21 apples each had different dinners last night.
Charles, Clemens, and Larry were not the person who gave 22 apples.
The mathematician, whose first name is Amy, wasn't the person who gave 22 apples.
The person who gave 22 apples, Clemens and Larry all went to the mathematician's surprise birthday party.
Sean, Wallace, and Amy were not the person who gave 1 apples.
Tavarez wasn't the person who gave 22 apples. Neither did Amy nor the zookeeper.
The person who gave 21 apples, Borris, and the zookeeper have known each other for years.
The horse trainer, whose first name is Sean, wasn't the person who gave 21 apples.
The person who gave 21 apples, Charles, and the zookeeper went to the movies together.
The horse trainer isn't Amy Clemens.
The mathematician, the person who gave 21 apples, didn't want a copy of Wallace's book.
Tav
Wal
Cle
Bor
mat
zoo
kic
hor
22
2
1
21
Amy
Cha
Sea
Lar
22
2
1
21
mat
zoo
kic
hor
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!