Difference between revisions of "Prom problem"

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A nice, medium difficulty logic puzzle as appears in PProblem SSSolving.
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A nice, medium difficulty logic puzzle as appears in {{Problem Solving}}
  
 
==Puzzle==
 
==Puzzle==
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[[High school play]]
 
[[High school play]]
  
[[Category: Logic]]
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==References==
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{{Problem Solving}}
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[[Category: Logic puzzles]]
 
[[Category: Positional]]
 
[[Category: Positional]]

Current revision as of 18:13, 23 November 2010

A nice, medium difficulty logic puzzle as appears in Problem Solving by Thomas DeFranco and Charles Vinsonhaler.

Puzzle

After the senior prom, six friends went to their favorite restaurant, where they shared a booth. The group consisted of the senior class president, the valedictorian, the head cheerleader, a player on the school volleyball team, a player on the school basketball team, and the school principle’s only child. Their names were Betty, Frank, Gina, Joe, Ron, and Sally, not necessarily in that order. Each of the six was in love with one of the others of the opposite sex, but no two had crushes on the same person.

  1. Frank liked the cheerleader but was sitting opposite the valedictorian.
  2. Gina was sitting next to the cheerleader and was crazy about the class president.
  3. Betty was in love with the person sitting opposite her.
  4. Joe, who was not the valedictorian, was sitting between the volleyball player and the class president.
  5. Ron disliked the basketball player.
  6. Sally, an orphan, was sitting against the wall and had a crush on the volleyball player.
  7. The volleyball player sat opposite the principle’s child.

Identify each person’s claim to fame.

Similar puzzles

High school play

References

Problem Solving by Thomas DeFranco and Charles Vinsonhaler.