Four people (Sean, Ralph, Tammy, and Nick) with last names Kaufman, Jones, Usaber, and Ewing, each bought a number of jacks.
Each person was of a different occupation: rear admiral, optometrist, graphic artist, and undergraduate student.
If each person bought one of the following amounts of jacks, (24, 10, 18, and 12) can you figure out the first name, last name, and how many jacks each person bought?
The person who bought 18 jacks, Tammy, and the optometrist went to the movies together.
Kaufman isn't the rear admiral or the person who bought 10 jacks.
Jones and Ralph aren't the person who bought 24 jacks.
The person who bought 24 jacks is not named Nick or Jones.
Tammy, Kaufman, and the person who bought 10 jacks each had different dinners last night.
Ralph, the person who bought 24 jacks, and the undergraduate student go shopping together on Saturdays.
Jones wasn't the person who bought 24 jacks. Neither did Ralph nor the undergraduate student.
The undergraduate student, the person who bought 10 jacks, didn't want a copy of Ewing's book.
Sean, who is not Ewing, is the undergraduate student's cousin.
The optometrist isn't Sean or the person who bought 24 jacks.
The person who bought 12 jacks lives in the same building as Jones and Nick.
Sean is not the person who bought 10 jacks, nor has the last name Kaufman.
The rear admiral, whose first name is Sean, wasn't the person who bought 10 jacks.
The person who bought 12 jacks, Jones, and the graphic artist have known each other for years.
The rear admiral, who bought 18 jacks, isn't Usaber.
The optometrist isn't Sean Jones.
Kau
Jon
Usa
Ewi
rea
opt
gra
und
24
10
18
12
Sea
Ral
Tam
Nic
24
10
18
12
rea
opt
gra
und
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!