Peter Buck, the lead guitarist from Athens Georgia band REM, was arrested on Saturday, April 21, 2001 for assaulting two crew members in the first class section of a flight from Seattle to London.

Buck, was charged with causing criminal damage to British Airways Flight 48, being drunk on an aircraft, a separate public order offence and two counts of assaulting cabin crew, a police spokesman in London said.


Buck was on his way to play at the South Africa Freedom Day Concert in London's Trafalgar Square on April 29 in front of Nelson Mandela and an expected crowd of 20,000.

He has since been aquited of all charges. But the publicity was good as he is always complaining about Michaael Stipe getting all the attention.

source: Reuters news story.

Peter Buck (Te Rangi Hiroa)

1877-1951

Peter Buck was born in the Taranaki region of New Zealand of an Irish father and a Maori mother. He was educated at Te Aute College and Otago University, from where he graduated as a doctor in 1904.

Peter Buck worked closely with Maui Pomare in the Department of Health, helping out in the vaccination and sanitisation campaigns to reduce the Maori mortality rate. He too, supported the assimilation policy.

In 1909, he decided to enter Parliament, and make his ideas heard in the house, and won the Northern Maori electorate.

In 1914, he enlisted in the army, and served in Gallipoli and France as a medical officer with the much respected Pioneer Battalion (which was renamed as the Maori Battalion in 1917, and was also a respected battalion in WWII). He rose to the rank of Captain, and became second-in-command of the Pioneer Battalion.

When Peter Buck returned to New Zealand after the war, he resumed his career in the Health Department, but in 1927, he resigned (as he had become interested in the material culture of indigenous peoples of the Pacific), and joined the staff of the Bishop Museum in Hawai'i. He eventually became the Director of this museum, and was also a Professor at Yale University. He was known as a world expert on the history and culture of Pacific peoples, and two of his most famous books are 'Vikings of the Sunset' and 'The Coming of the Maori'. In 1946, he was knighted.

Peter Buck died in Hawai'i, but his ashes were returned to NZ, where they were placed under a symbolic canoe (waka) prow at Okoki, near his birthplace.

Source:
Maori and Pakeha (Race Relations 1912-1980) :- Mark Sheehan

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