-- card: 36859 from stack: in.11 -- bmap block id: 0 -- flags: 0000 -- background id: 16105 -- name: weatherl -- part 1 (button) -- low flags: 00 -- high flags: 0000 -- rect: left=445 top=21 right=59 bottom=474 -- title width / last selected line: 0 -- icon id / first selected line: 0 / 0 -- text alignment: 1 -- font id: 0 -- text size: 12 -- style flags: 0 -- line height: 16 -- part name: New Button ----- HyperTalk script ----- on mouseUp visual effect wipe right go to card "weather" end mouseUp -- part 2 (button) -- low flags: 00 -- high flags: 0000 -- rect: left=411 top=21 right=59 bottom=443 -- title width / last selected line: 0 -- icon id / first selected line: 0 / 0 -- text alignment: 1 -- font id: 0 -- text size: 12 -- style flags: 0 -- line height: 16 -- part name: New Button ----- HyperTalk script ----- on mouseUp visual effect wipe left go to previous card end mouseUp -- part 3 (button) -- low flags: 00 -- high flags: A003 -- rect: left=362 top=30 right=48 bottom=407 -- title width / last selected line: 0 -- icon id / first selected line: 0 / 0 -- text alignment: 1 -- font id: 0 -- text size: 12 -- style flags: 0 -- line height: 16 -- part name: Print ----- HyperTalk script ----- on mouseUp doMenu "Print Card" end mouseUp -- part contents for background part 1 ----- text ----- Warming Effects: Weather and Crops -- part contents for background part 2 ----- text ----- 4. Summer of 1988 - Drought and Heat -- part contents for background part 6 ----- text ----- The summer of 1988 could be a sample of the kind of weather the US may be seeing on a more consistent basis: Water rationing in California. Massive forest fires in Montana (Yellowstone) and all over the western US. Barge traffic stranded on the Mississippi River. Record high temperatures in many cities causing heat-related deaths. Widespread crop failures - a major federal drought relief program. While the US suffered from a dry, hot summer, the worst flooding in memory occurred in Bangladesh. (One of the few areas projected by the GFDL model to receive higher rainfall.) ***