Here are some other resources for those interested in disucssing issues with their children. These all come from a e-newsletter I subscribe to called Connect for Kids.

**Special Interactive Presentation: Kids in Tense Times
Adults with children in their lives are walking through an emotional minefield when it comes to helping kids feel and stay safe in these tense times. Connect for Kids talked with three experts: Psychiatrist Alvin Poussaint, well-known for his insights into the minds and feelings of children; historian William Tuttle, who explored how U.S. children experienced home-front life during World War II in his book "Daddy's Gone to War"; and Principal G.J. Tarazi of Glasgow Middle School in Arlington, VA, who has helped children from dozens of countries -- as well as relatives of Pentagon staffers -- negotiate their feelings about the September 11, 2001 attacks and the mounting Iraq crisis. Hear their perspectives in a Connect for Kids' interactive presentation.
Connect for Kids
**Help with Healing, on the Web
From grabbing the newspaper before the kids see it to pulling the plug on the evening news, adults are adopting a range of strategies for shielding children from the images of war in Iraq and concern about possible terrorist threats at home. Fortunately, there are many resources on the Web to answer adults' questions about how to help their kids cope, and Connect for Kids has compiled some of the best.
Help

PROTECTING CHILDREN

**School Emergency Planning
In these tense times, information can stem panic and help families and communities be prepared for an emergency. The Department of Education has updated information on biological, chemical and radiological threats, school preparedness and response, and the roles of partnering agencies in the case of a terrorist threat.
http://www.ed.gov/emergencyplan

**Protecting Iraqi Children
Half of Iraq's 24.5 million people are children. UNICEF has provided high-energy biscuits and therapeutic milk to 400,000 malnourished children in a bid to rapidly improve their nutritional status, immunized 500,000 children against measles and polio, and readied thousands of metric tons of emergency relief supplies, including emergency health kits, birthing kits, school-in-a-box kits and water purification units in humanitarian relief efforts in Iraq. Learn more, including how you can help, on the UNICEF Web site.
http://www.unicefusa.org/emergencies/iraq/