I'm not fantastic at NMR, IR, etc. I haven't done mass spec yet. But the first one appears to be a carboxylic acid. The 1694 stretch would represent the C=O of the carbonyl. Anything below 1500 is usually single bonds. I think you figure out the chemical formula of them, it will make it much easier. I'm sorry I can't help with that at the moment. The second one seems to be an alkane, I'm not seeing much else in the IR to indicate otherwise.
As far as going about solving these problems, I usually draw a line at 1500 on the IR spec (although our professor usually just gives us numbers which sucks cause you can't see the trends of the functional groups), anything below this usually is just single bonds and its referred to as the "fingerprint region". Above that is where you get the goods. Double bands fall between 1650-1850. Triple bonds are in the 2100-2300 range. Bonds to hydrogens are very high, usually 2700 on up. Qualitatively knowing what specific functional groups look like will help you very much. There should be plenty of resources online to help you with that (Klein's Organic Chemistry as a Second Language 2nd Semester Topics helps very much with this).
Proton NMR is your bread and butter. But you need to know your degrees of unsaturation. If you don't know that you most likely won't solve the problem when drawing the structure. Proton NMR is the best way to identify the structures but its the hardest for me to remember. Knowing the shifts and the effects of electronegative atoms can get a little tricky. Again, knowing your degrees of unsaturation, using your qualitative information from NMR and IR can get you pretty far.
Sorry I don't have more to offer, I'm currently hammering the spectroscopy stuff into my head as we speak!