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Word: masks (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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When the air-raid sirens wail, Tali Rubin, 9, dashes to the "sealed room" in her home in the middle-class Jerusalem neighborhood of French Hill, quickly dons her gas mask and, along with her mother, brother and two sisters, waits nervously for the missiles to roar overhead. Her first experience with wearing the protective device was distressing. "It was hard to breathe," recalls Tali. "The mask was too tight. I just wanted to take it off." As the attacks on Israel intensified last week, misery turned to anger. "I'm mad at Saddam Hussein," she declares...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Children Crying: Under Iraq's Siege | 2/4/1991 | See Source »

...another planet. When the sirens sound, Shirin, who is just 5, remains serenely unconcerned, though the missiles could as easily fall on her home as on Tali's. She huddles with her parents and three siblings in a sealed-off room, but no one reaches for a gas mask. "I'm not afraid," brags the young girl. "It means that Saddam is throwing something at the Israelis. That's good...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Children Crying: Under Iraq's Siege | 2/4/1991 | See Source »

Many children have trouble sleeping. Others say they hear sirens all the time. Little ones are afraid to lose sight of their parents. And there are complaints about the foul-smelling, claustrophobic gas masks, which have caused children to vomit. Families are haunted by the fact that a toddler suffocated to death in her mask. Talma Rosen, a Tel Aviv mother, faces a torrent of questions from her sons Jonathan, 6, and Daniel, 10, who ask about weapons systems and moving to a safer place. "I have told them that the chances statistically of us getting hurt are very small...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Children Crying: Under Iraq's Siege | 2/4/1991 | See Source »

...near Bethlehem: "My children have picked up my fear, and there's no way now to calm them down." Because of strict U.N. curfews, Palestinian youngsters in the occupied territories are cooped up at home most of the day. Another source of outrage and anxiety: a shortage of gas masks. Israeli authorities initially refused to issue the masks to Palestinians to ensure that they would have no protection against tear gas used to quell demonstrations. The Supreme Court has overruled this policy, but mask distribution is lagging...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Children Crying: Under Iraq's Siege | 2/4/1991 | See Source »

...raid siren sounds even louder, it seems, than it had yesterday morning. People are shouting "Tilim, tilim (missiles, missiles)!!" in the hallways. Army radio is on instantly. The routine is the same. Masks and down to the sealed room. I am about out the door headed down to 6, when Ze'ev and Mike (the two cameramen) rush into our room. 1424. They head straight for the balcony. I can't believe it. These guys want to take pictures of a missile attack from the open-air balcony! "You guys are fucking crazy," I said...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Day the Missles Began to Fall | 1/23/1991 | See Source »

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