A. Label the cardinal directions on the sky. North at top, West to right, East to left, South at bottom B. Estimate roughly the Declination of Procyon. The belt of Orion is on the celestial equator (Dec = 0), and Procyon is a bit further north than that. So Dec = approx +5 degrees; anywhere from 0 to +10 is fine. C. Estimate roughly the Right Ascension of Cor Caroli. The sidereal time is 7:03 (see lower-right-hand corner), so stars with RA = 7 hours are crossing the meridian and will be along the North-South centerline. Cor Caroli is more than halfway to the left-hand (eastern) horizon, so its RA must be at least 3 or 4 hours larger. So anywhere from RA = 10 to RA = 13 is fine. D. What is the current LST? It's 7:03. Look at lower-right-hand corner. E. How long until Saturn reaches the meridian? Saturn is just rising in the East, so it will take 4 to 6 hours to reach the meridian. F. Can you guess what the dashed line running through the middle of the figure is? We can see Saturn and Mars close to this dashed line; the double circle just to the right of Saturn marks the point directly opposite to the Sun. All these solar system objects falling close to the line indicate that it is the ecliptic.