25Mar2002 UK: BONO ARRIVES AT ISLEWORTH CROWN COURT.
Irish singer with the band U2, Bono, leaves Isleworth Crown court after giving evidence in the trial of US rock guitarist Peter Buck, March 25 2002. Buck, of the band REM, has been charged with an alleged air rage offence including one charge of being drunk on an aircraft, two counts of common assault against air stewards and one of damaging British Airways crockery on a flight from Seattle to Heathrow in April 2001.
REUTERS/Kieran Doherty
25Mar2002 UK: BONO LEAVES ISLEWORTH CROWN COURT.

Irish singer with the band U2 Bono leaves Isleworth Crown court, west London, after giving evidence in the trial of US rock guitarist Peter Buck, March 25 2002. Buck has been charged with an alleged air rage offence including one charge of being drunk on an aircraft, two counts of common assault against air stewards and one of damaging British Airways crockery on a flight from Seattle to Heathrow in April 2001.
REUTERS/Kieran Doherty
02May2002 UK: FEATURE MATCHER FOR STORY BC LEISURE IRISH POPSTARS.

U2 superstar Bono sings into the fans during the blockbuster 'Elevation' summer tour to Slane Castle in County Meath, Ireland, in this file photo taken August 25, 2001. Renowned during the Dark Ages as the island of saints and scholars, Ireland these days seems more like a breeding ground for star-struck singers and dancers. Over the past decade, the country has spawned a dazzling array of pop acts whose songs have stormed hit parades from Dublin to Darwin. With their light-hearted, frothy tunes - often covers of old hits like Billy Joel's "Uptown Girl" and Cat Stevens's "Father and Son" - plus photogenic music videos, pop groups such as Boyzone, Westlife and The Corrs have sold millions of records worldwide. They have also revitalised an Irish music industry grown over-reliant on veteran rockers U2 and the traditional Irish dance extravaganza "Riverdance".
REUTERS/Paul McErlane
21May2002 GHANA: US TREASURY SECRETARY O'NEIL AND SINGER BONO SPEAK IN GHANA.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill (L) speaks to reporters after visiting a data processing site in Ghana's capital with Irish rock singer Bono from U2, in Accra, May 21, 2002. The self-described "odd couple" of international aid diplomacy, Bono and O'Neill, arrived in Ghana launched one of the most unlikely campaigns ever to highlight the need for effective spending on development. Over the next 10 days the two will to travel through four African countries - Ghana, South Africa, Uganda and Ethiopia - to draw attention to the acute needs of the poverty-stricken region, using one another's position and celebrity to spark interest
in a topic that each feels much of the world tries to ignore.
REUTERS/David Clarke
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Last picture: Hee!
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I suspect he'll age into a grand irish face, though.
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