One of the classes offered this summer at Summerset Community College was
Ship in a Bottle Building II, whose five graduates, including Rob, completed
their classroom training as master model shipwrights. The five then sold their
first ships in bottles at the school's August crafts fair to earn final
certification. Given the log of the sales below, you should be able to
determine the historical ship each shipwright modeled, the person's
full name (one surname is Keeley), and the sum each earned for his or her
first Ship in a Bottle.
- The ships sold for a high of $300 and a low of $100, with no two selling for
the same sum.
- Master model shipwright Boatman, who isn't Chris, and the person whose first sale
is a model of the Constellation are both avid Chesapeake Bay sailors.
- John, who isn't Maston, sold his ship in a bottle for twice as much as
the model of the Titanic brought its builder.
- Kay isn't the graduate who modeled the Flying Cloud.
- The Bismarck in a bottle sold for half as much as Wheelock's creation did.
- The model Bonhomme Richard sold for twice as much as Chris's ship in a
bottle, which isn't the Titanic.
- Maston's model went for $50 less than the Constellation did but for $100
more than the ship built by Art.
- The historical ship Decker chose as a first subject isn't the Bismarck.
|
|
|