Each circle on the map represents a weather station. The number to the upper right of the station is the barometric pressure presented in an abbreviated form used by the National Weather Service. As an example: if a 145 appears, it is short for 1014.5 mb (the "10" and the decimal point are dropped); a 980 is 998.0 mb (the "9" and the decimal point are dropped). On April 1, 1971, the center of low pressure was near Wausau, Wisconsin (see the L on the map), with a pressure of 994.7 mb (947 on the map). Note the wind flags around this center of low pressure. Do the wind flags at the various stations show counterclockwise winds, as you expect in a midlatitude cyclonic circulation system? (1 points)