| MULETRAIN | #1 Frankie Laine tune with the line, "clippetty-clopping over hill and plain" |
| WHY | 1959 #1 Frankie Avalon hit |
| SONIPES | A clip-clopping, noisy-footed horse, Cat. 63.41 (ubi abl. pl. est) |
| OLDSHEP | Which 1956 Elvis Presley cover song has the lyrics "Over hills and meadows we'd stray Just a boy and his dog We were both full of fun We grew up together that way"? (3,4) |
| CROSSCOUNTRY | Nation that's initially angry over hill and dale? |
| DALE | Over hill and - |
| ADIA | Sarah McLachlan tune with the line "We are born innocent" |
| FIFTYMISSIONCAP | "___-___ ___": Tragically Hip tune with the line "I stole this from a hockey card..." |
| NOWOMANNOCRY | Bob Marley tune with the line "Everything's gonna be all right": 4 wds. |
| REDEMPTIONSONG | Bob Marley tune with the line "Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery": 2 wds. |
| GETUPSTANDUP | Bob Marley tune with the line "Life is your right": 4 wds. |
| AWOMAN | "Your eyes are the eyes of .... in love; And, oh, how they give you away," claimed Frank Sinatra, Frankie Laine and The Four Aces (1,5) |
| CARACAL | Also known as the desert lynx, or Persian lynx, this short-tailed cat is found in the hills, deserts, and plains of Africa, the Middle East, and central and southwestern Asia. |
| STORM | "I believe above the ... the smallest prayer, will still be heard; I believe that someone in the great somewhere, hears every word," sang Frankie Laine |
| RAWHIDE | TV western that aired 1959-65, the theme tune of which was sung by Frankie Laine (7) |
| GRANADA | Frankie Laine and Mario Lanza both sang this hit named after the Spanish city |
| EYESARE | Frankie Laine sang, "Those ... the eyes of a woman in love; And may they gaze ever more into mine" ( |
| ANSWERME | 1953 number one hit for both David Whitfield and Frankie Laine that was originally written (with German lyrics) as Mutterlein |
| IKNOWWHY | "Every time I hear a newborn baby cry, or touch a leaf, or see the sky; Then ..., I believe," sang Frankie Laine (1,4,3) |
| TUNDRA | Person who's 'eartless, backward and plain with stunted growth |