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Links to Official Web Sites on Princess Diana and
Sites Relating to Her Life and Work

Time Magazine's Tribute to Diana
The Washington Post: Diana 1961 - 1997
Text of the 1995 Panorama Interview
The Diana Generation WebZine
ABC News Special Report: Diana
Final Crash Inquiry Report by Paris Prosecutor's Office
The Will of Diana, Princess of Wales
The Funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales
General outline of funeral arrangements
The Funeral: Order of Service
Help the Aged
British Red Cross
American Red Cross
English National Ballet
Centrepoint
The Leprosy Mission
Royal Marsden NHS Trust
Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Trust

Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital was one of Princess Diana's most beloved charities.
Click on the image below to visit
Great Ormond Street Hospital Children's Charity

Princess Diana almost singlehandedly took the stigma out of AIDS, which many believed was the scourge of homosexuality. Towards the end of her life, she said to a friend: "[Tchaikovsky] killed himself because of his homosexuality. He was only fifty-three. All that glorious music he could have written lost because of the intolerance of the world."
Click on the icons below to gain information and education.

Princess Diana was the first person to bring worldwide attention to the destruction of antipersonnel landmines. Many countries around the world allow these hidden mines to remain in the ground and thus kill and mutilate unsuspecting people who happen to walk in the wrong area.

There is an extraordinary amount of controversy surrounding the death of Diana, Princess of Wales. However, from all reports, the driver of Diana's vehicle, Henri Paul, was legally drunk, had therapeutic levels of fluoxetine (Prozac, an antidepressant), and tiapride (a prescription medication used to treat schizophrenia, anxiety, and alcohol abuse) in his bloodstream at the time of the horrific crash into the 13th pillar of the Alma Tunnel. Conspiracy theories aside, drunk driving can and does end lives--and devastate others--every single day.
Diana was an aristocratic victim of a most common tragedy.

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