Are you a publisher? Try Daylife's Intelligent Content Services Platform
Members of a choir sing during a ceremony for Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej's 81st birthday at Sanam Luang square in Bangkok on December 5, 2008. The revered monarch turned 81 on December 5, 2008 but pulled out of his customary birthday address the previous day due to illness, ending hopes that he might offer guidance on a way out of the nation's long-running political crisis.
Bouddhist monks line up to receive donations from residents during a ceremony for Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej's 81st birthday at Sanam Luang square in Bangkok on December 5, 2008. The revered monarch turned 81 on December 5, 2008 but pulled out of his customary birthday address the previous day due to illness, ending hopes that he might offer guidance on a way out of the nation's long-running political crisis.
Monks walk past a large portrait of Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej during a ceremony marking his 81st birthday anniversary at Sanam Luang square in Bangkok on December 5, 2008. The revered monarch turned 81 on December 5, 2008 but pulled out of his customary birthday address the previous day due to illness, ending hopes that he might offer guidance on a way out of the nation's long-running political crisis.
Members of a choir sing during a ceremony for Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej's 81st birthday at Sanam Luang square in Bangkok on December 5, 2008. The revered monarch turned 81 on December 5, 2008 but pulled out of his customary birthday address the previous day due to illness, ending hopes that he might offer guidance on a way out of the nation's long-running political crisis.
Monks stand in front of a large portrait of Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej during a ceremony marking his 81st birthday anniversary at Sanam Luang square in Bangkok on December 5, 2008. The revered monarch turned 81 on December 5, 2008 but pulled out of his customary birthday address the previous day due to illness, ending hopes that he might offer guidance on a way out of the nation's long-running political crisis.
A figure of the goddess 'Kave' from the Nukuoro people of the Caroline Islands is displayed at the 'Vaka Moana' exhibition at the Australian National Maritime Museum in Sydney on December 5, 2008.'Vaka Moana - Voyages of the Ancestors' tells the extraordinary story of the exploration and peopling of the vast Pacfic Ocean and its islands by ancient mariners from south-east Asia and will run from December 6 till February 15 2009.