Wednesday, February 29, 2012

NSW:Teens lead police on 100km chase


AAP General News (Australia)
08-04-2011
NSW:Teens lead police on 100km chase

Three teenagers have been charged following a police chase on the New South Wales mid
north coast.

The trio have been arrested in bushland in Coffs Harbour after a hundred kilometre
chase which saw two police vehicles rammed.

The three teens, two boys aged 17 and 19 and 17-year-old girl, face various charges
and have all been refused bail to appear in Coffs Harbour Local and Children's Courts
today.

AAP RTV ct/tr/nap

KEYWORD: CHASE (SYDNEY)

� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

balanced growth

balanced growth A strategy of growth with an equal emphasis on agriculture and industry. Agricultural development provides the food required and releases labour from the land to engage in industry. Industrial wealth stimulates markets for agricultural growth—or such is the theory. Unbalanced growth denotes a strategy which focuses on agriculture or industry alone.

FED:Cost of disability scheme under question


AAP General News (Australia)
04-08-2011
FED:Cost of disability scheme under question

By Susanna Dunkerley

CANBERRA, April 8 AAP - Lawyers have questioned the political will of governments to
deliver a national disability insurance scheme, estimated to cost taxpayers $12.5 billion
a year.

The Law Council of Australia, which represents more than 55,000 legal professionals,
says the actual cost of a no-fault scheme for severely disabled Australians is likely
to be threefold.

The council raised the concerns during a public hearing into the Productivity Commission's
draft proposal to change the current disability support system which it says is not working.

The commission has suggested two schemes to cover the cost of care and medical treatment
for people born with disability, or who acquire it through injury, accident or illness.

The National Injury Insurance Scheme will cover people who acquire catastrophic injury
from an accident, similar to state compensation schemes for people injured in motor vehicle
accidents.

While the larger, Medicare-style National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) will cover
people born with significant disability, including the cost of care, respite, accommodation
and therapy.

The commission estimates 360,000 people will be covered under the scheme, which will
require at least a doubling of the $6.2 billion already spent by governments on disability
each year.

The Law Council of Australia welcomes a comprehensive national disability scheme, but
says it has a more "pragmatic" approach when it comes to the likelihood of implementation.

"Regrettably we are (not) currently in a (political) environment where there is attraction
for big ideas (or) grand schemes," the council's deputy chair Bill Redpath told the hearing
in Canberra.

The council suggests the smaller scheme be dumped, with all states and territories,
instead, be required to establish comprehensive no-fault injury arrangements.

The NDIS should then be extended to cover people not eligible for state-run schemes.

Mr Redpath questioned the commission's costings, noting that NSW spent $38 million
in 2010 supporting 390 people who had acquired severe disabilities through road accidents.

"If the cost of the NDIS is even close to that ... the required funding would be more
than triple what is estimated."

The Australian Lawyers Alliance, which advocates the rights of people injured through
the negligence of others, raised concerns about the "limited" rights of review under the
scheme.

ACT branch president Mark Blumer told the hearing an independent avenue of appeal,
for decisions on people's eligibility, was needed.

He also suggested people with mental illness be covered, regardless of how short-term
their impairment may be.

The Productivity Commission will hold further public hearings around the country in
April, before handing down its final report to government in July.

AAP sld/sb/apm

KEYWORD: DISABILITY

� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

QLD:Grandmother found safe in Brisbane


AAP General News (Australia)
12-19-2010
QLD:Grandmother found safe in Brisbane

BRISBANE, Dec 19 AAP - An African grandmother missing overnight in Brisbane has been
found safe and well.

Aleo Awili, 62, went missing from an Upper Mount Gravatt home, on Saturday at 4pm (AEST).

She was found at 1.30pm (AEST) on Sunday near a primary school in the same suburb.

AAP lpm/jel

KEYWORD: AWILI UPDATE

� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

FED:Gillard confronted by different elephant


AAP General News (Australia)
08-11-2010
FED:Gillard confronted by different elephant

An elephant has upstaged Prime Minister JULIA GILLARD on the hustings today .. but
this time it wasn't MARK LATHAM.

A person dressed as an elephant yelled out .. Stop Ignoring Me .. while holding a placard
which read The Elephant is in the Room: Reduce Pollution Now.

Ms GILLARD says she shares her friend's frustration about not being able to get Labor's
Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme through the parliament but not his look .. and suggests
the elephant take the issue up with TONY ABBOTT.

The attention seeking elephant plans to visit both leaders later in the campaign.

AAP RTV ah/jkl/crh

KEYWORD: POLL10 ELEPHANT (PAKENHAM)

� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Qld: Measles scare in Qld


AAP General News (Australia)
04-02-2010
Qld: Measles scare in Qld
MEASLES (BRISBANE)

Health authorities are working to track down people who may have been exposed to the
measles infection on a Brisbane train.

Queensland Health says people who travelled between Brisbane International Airport
and South Brisbane Railway Station last Saturday morning may have come in contact with
the disease.

A New South Wales man diagnosed with measles was on the train around 9am (AEST) that
day .. after flying in from New Zealand.

Officials say passengers on the same flight who may be at risk have been contacted.

AAP RTV ka/ht/wz/psm/

KEYWORD: DIARY NEWS FRIDAY

2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

AAP National News Wire Round-Up for Midday, Aug 20


AAP General News (Australia)
08-20-2009
AAP National News Wire Round-Up for Midday, Aug 20
Midday Round-Up: HIGHLIGHTS OF THE AAP RTV FILE AT 1130


Climate (CANBERRA/ADELAIDE)

Federal parliament's expected to approve a huge boost to renewable energy today ..

after the opposition agreed on a scheme to have 20 per cent of our electricity come from
renewable sources within 10 years.

However the RUDD government says carbon emissions will continue to grow .. if Australia
doesn't also adopt an emissions trading scheme.

Assistant Climate Change Minister GREG COMBET says the coalition must pass the emissions
trading scheme .. which they voted down in the Senate last week.

The Greens say the cross-party support for the government's renewable energy target
means there's some chance Labor and the Coalition could agree to pass the emissions trading
scheme later this year.

Meanwhile .. Premier MIKE RANN says South Australia intends to become the green power
hub for the eastern states .. setting a target of 33 per cent of the state's power to
be generated from renewable sources by 2020.



Afghan Vote Wrap (CANBERRA/KABUL)

Afghanistan's 17 million voters are heading to the polls today .. to elect a president
for just the second time in history .. with a sweeping security clampdown in force to
prevent threatened Taliban attacks.

But Australia's bracing for an expected rise in violence .. with Foreign Minister STEPHEN
SMITH saying the threat to the lives of our soldiers there is increased.

Mr SMITH says Australia will take a wait-and-see approach to the elections on two fronts
.. the threat of violence and the election process itself which has also come under question.

Accusations of illegitimacy and fraud have been rife in the lead-up to what will be
Afghanistan's first state-run presidential elections in 30 years.



Flu Aust Roxon (MELBOURNE)

Federal Health Minister NICOLA ROXON says a swine flu vaccine hasn't yet been officially
approved .. and will be available by mid-September at the earliest.

The government's receiving two million doses by the end of next week .. but Ms ROXON's
told ABC Radio reports claiming it'll be ready by September 7 are premature.

She says health officials hope to begin vaccinating the most vulnerable by mid-September
.. that's pregnant women .. the chronically ill .. children in special schools and the
health workforce.

There've been 121 swine flu-related deaths to date.



China Aust Smith (CANBERRA)

Foreign Minister STEPHEN SMITH has denied reports Australia's ambassador's been rushed
back from China to attend crisis meetings in Canberra .. saying it's a routine visit.

Ambassador GEOFF RABY cancelled media engagements in Beijing yesterday to fly to Canberra
.. where one official said a series of emergency meetings have been scheduled.

Mr SMITH'S told ABC Radio tensions exist over China's arrest of Rio Tinto executive
STERN HU .. and the visit here by exiled Uighur leader REBIYA KADEER .. but he says the
government's committed to a positive long-term relationship with Beijing.



House Letter (SYDNEY)

New South Wales Police are refusing to comment on an anonymous letter reportedly naming
two people as the alleged killers of Sydney newsagent MIN LIN and his family.

They say speculation in the media could undermine the investigation into the murders.

The Daily Telegraph says the two-page letter .. written in English .. was received
by the family's lawyer DANIEL SHEEN.

Five members of the LIN family were bashed to death in their home last month in Epping
.. where they ran a nearby newsagency.



Fromelles (FROMELLES)

Australians who believe they're related to World War One diggers discovered in a mass
grave in France .. will begin DNA tests next month to help unlock the mystery of the soldiers'
identities.

About 30 forensic archaeologists and anthropologists have been working since May to
recover an estimated 250 Australian and British soldiers from the site at Fromelles ..

so they can be identified and reburied at a military cemetery nearby.

So far 222 members of the Australian and British armies have been unearthed .. along
with a range of artefacts including uniform buckles .. boots .. badges and handmade metal
rings.



Scare (MELBOURNE)

Federal Police are investigating a security scare on a Singapore Airlines flight this morning.

The airline received a bomb hoax call about flight SQ 227 from Singapore to Melbourne
just before one this morning.

Crews informed the 197 passengers of the threat and conducted a discreet search of
the plane .. but didn't find anything.



Key (CANBERRA)

New Zealand Prime Minister JOHN KEY has been officially welcomed with a 19-gun salute
at Parliament House today.

Mr Key began a five-day tour of Australia in Melbourne earlier in the week and is meeting
his Australian counterpart .. KEVIN RUDD .. in Canberra .. with the economy .. politics
and security on the agenda.



Briefly in other news ..



UK Robbery (LONDON)

London police have arrested two men in connection with what is thought to be Britain's
biggest jewellery heist .. although police won't say whether they're the same two captured
on video pulling off the raid earlier this month.



Argentina Nightclub (BUENOS AIRES)

A music promoter in Argentina's been sentenced to 20 years in prison .. after being
found responsible for a 2004 discotheque fire that left 194 people dead and 14 hundred
injured.



US Penn (SAN RAFAEL)

Hollywood couple ROBIN WRIGHT and SEAN PENN have filed for divorce again .. and have
agreed to share custody of their 16-year-old son HOPPER JACK PENN.



World Women (NEW YORK)

GAIL KELLY is the only Australian to make the top 30 of Forbes magazine's new list
of powerful women .. the Westpac boss came in at number 18 in a list dominated by businesswomen
.. although German chancellor ANGELA MERKEL topped it for the fourth year running.



UK Python (LONDON)

The five surviving members of Britain's famed Monty Python comedy troupe are to reunite
for a 40th anniversary bash in New York .. where they will be presented with a BAFTA Special
Award.



in Finance ..




At 1114 AEST .. the benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was UP 17.4 points at 4391.2 .. while
the broader All Ordinaries Index ROSE 17.7 points to 4405.2.

The Australian dollar was at 82.84 US cents .. UP from yesterday's local close of 82.08 US cents.

The spot price of gold in Sydney was $US941.40 .. UP $US4.30 from $US937.10 per fine
ounce yesterday.



in Sport ..



Cricket Aust (LONDON)

Australian captain RICKY PONTING will be playing what could be his last Ashes Test
on English soil starting tonight.

But he's not counting on a send-off like the one SHANE WARNE received at the same ground in 2005.

With the series locked at one-all and England needing a victory to wrest the Ashes
from Australia .. PONTING believes he's under far less pressure than opposite number ANDREW
STRAUSS.



Aths World Aust (BERLIN)

Australian SALLY MCLELLAN has defied a preparation cruelled by a painful back injury
to finish fifth in the women's 100m hurdles final at the world athletics championships.

After powering home to claim silver at last year's Beijing Olympics .. MCLELLAN had
been touted as one of Australia's few genuine medal hopes at the world titles.

But after the final .. the Queenslander revealed that she had been forced to miss nine
days of training due to a painful back problem suffered.



Tennis Open WildCard (NEW YORK)

Australian CHRIS GUCCIONE has been awarded a wild card entry into the US Open .. just
hours after ousting French seventh seed JO-WILFRIED TSONGA from the ATP Cincinnati Masters.



ENDS ROUND-UP

Inquiries 24 hours: 02 9322 8714

AAP RTV crh/rt

KEYWORD: MIDDAY ROUND-UP

2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW: Motorists get new tool to dob in high petrol prices


AAP General News (Australia)
04-10-2009
NSW: Motorists get new tool to dob in high petrol prices

Motorists in New South Wales are bring urged to dob in petrol stations they suspect
are gouging travellers over the Easter Break .. at a new NRMA website.

The motoring body says unleaded petrol shouldn't cost more than one-dollar-25 per litre
in Sydney over the coming days .. based on the international benchmark price and the Australian
dollar.

And it says motorists should expect to pay about four or five cents more than that
in regional areas.

Motorists in NSW and the ACT who see prices above one-dollar-30 per litre are being
asked to pull over and record the evidence on their mobile phone or camera .. and post
it to the new RoadTube site.

They can also post a blog entry with the details.

The site can be accessed at www.roadtube.com.au.

AAP RTV kd/ss/tm

KEYWORD: EASTER PETROL (SYDNEY)

2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

WA: Defence applies for lessening of lesbian killer's sentence


AAP General News (Australia)
12-05-2008
WA: Defence applies for lessening of lesbian killer's sentence

One of Perth's two notorious lesbian killers is trying to have her life sentence reduced.

21 year old JESSICA STASINOWSKY .. who was jailed in March for a minimum 24 years for
the wilful murder of 16-year-old STACEY MITCHELL .. has argued to the West Australian
Court of Appeal that the sentence is too severe.

STACEY took half-an-hour to die after being bludgeoned with a concrete block and strangled
with a chain in December 2006 because she had been annoying.

TOM PERCY QC .. for STASINOWSKY .. has argued she shouldn't serve a strict security
life sentence .. but should have been given a standard life sentence .. which runs between
15 and 19 years.

He says the sentencing judge PETER BLAXELL may have failed to take into account her
youth .. remorse at what she had done and her chances of rehabilitation.

It's understood that if she fails in her appeal for the smaller life sentence .. STASINOWSKY
will argue the judge erred in handing down a 24-year mandatory sentence .. rather than
a minimum 20-year term.

One of the three Appeal Court judges drew attention to the fact the pair recorded the
crime scene on a mobile phone .. suggesting to Mr PERCY it was in the worst category of
offences.

But Mr PERCY replied it was short of the worst category.

AAP RTV was/crh/wz

KEYWORD: STASINOWSKY (PERTH)

2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Captain forced to dump fuel before emergency landing


AAP General News (Australia)
08-02-2008
Fed: Captain forced to dump fuel before emergency landing

The captain of a Qantas 767 flight was forced to dump fuel before making an emergency
landing at Sydney Airport today .. due to a hydraulic leak in the controls.

It is the third mid-air emergency for the carrier in the past week .. but aviation
authorities say there's nothing to suggest any link between the incidents or any lowering
of safety standards.

A leak in the wing was detected on the Manila-bound Qantas flight shortly after take
off at early this afternoon.

The aircraft landed with with more than 200 people safely in Sydney at 3pm.

AAP RTV krc/wz

KEYWORD: QANTAS (SYDNEY)

2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

0700 3AW Headlines


AAP General News (Australia)
12-31-2007
0700 3AW Headlines

Three die in WA bushfire between Southern Cross and Coolgardie .. convoy of vehicles
caught in the fire.

NYE revellers urged to drink in moderation .. scorching day and warm night forecast
for Melbourne .. final decision later on tonight's fireworks.

Police give deadline for riot helmets to be issued or say they won't patrol Mornington Peninsula.

Pizza parlour robbery.

Bhuto's son named heir.

David Hicks will challenge control order requiring him to report three times a week to police.

Tim Flannery says Japan's annual whale hunt is not a threat to the species.

Rudd gov't set to cancell Super Hornet jet fighter order.

Finance

Sport: Hopman Cup wrap. Second Test preps in Sydney.

AAP RTV/bart

KEYWORD: 0700 3AW

2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW: Council worker corrupt in accepting sexual favours: ICAC =2


AAP General News (Australia)
08-22-2007
NSW: Council worker corrupt in accepting sexual favours: ICAC =2

ICAC has also called on NSW Planning Minister Frank Sartor and state Attorney-General
John Hatzistergos to review the corruption risks attached to the regulation of brothels
by local councils.

It has also made 10 recommendations to Parramatta City Council to ensure such an instance
of corruption does not occur again.

AAP nr/wjf/evt/cdh

KEYWORD: ICAC FRYAR 2 SYDNEY

2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Qld: People flock to SEQ beaches for Good Friday


AAP General News (Australia)
04-06-2007
Qld: People flock to SEQ beaches for Good Friday

BRISBANE, April 6 AAP - Surf lifesavers have been kept busy with several rescues on
south-east Queensland beaches today.

Surf Life Saving Queensland (SLSQ) Gold Coast duty officer Kevin Dunn said there had
been at least eight rescues earlier in the day but a shower all but cleared most beaches
until later in the afternoon.

Conditions in the water were still unstable, Mr Dunn said.

"There have been a lot of rips up and down the coast for the last two months," he said.

Yesterday, a 21-year-old man from the United Kingdom drowned around 4pm (AEST) on a
non-patrolled section of Palm Beach.

On the Sunshine Coast, surf life savers reported a good turnout to beaches after an
expected southerly wind change failed to arrive.

There were three rescues at Noosa, one of which required an airlift to hospital, and
one rescue at Dicky Beach, said SLSQ Sunshine Coast duty officer Brian Goulding.

AAP rad/cp/mn

KEYWORD: EASTER BEACHES

2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Reports to condemn detention of 20 people


AAP General News (Australia)
12-06-2006
Fed: Reports to condemn detention of 20 people

The Immigration Department is likely to face more criticism .. with the release in
parliament of three reports into the detention of 20 people today.

One report concerns the detention of a mentally ill Australian resident .. only identified
as Mr G.

The others relate to the investigation of 19 detention cases .. including 10 involving
children and nine involving the mentally ill.

All 20 were detained in Australia's immigration system between 2000 and 2005.

The federal government referred the cases to the commonwealth ombudsman .. after the
inquiries into the wrongful detention of CORNELIA RAU and deportation of VIVIAN ALVAREZ
SOLON.

AAP RTV dcr/sb/wz/tm/cp

KEYWORD: DETENTION (CANBERRA)

2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Qld: Four men winched to safety from Glasshouse Mountain


AAP General News (Australia)
04-30-2006
Qld: Four men winched to safety from Glasshouse Mountain

Four climbers have been rescued in the Glasshouse Mountains in the Sunshine Coast hinterland.

One man was trapped on a ledge and another three unable to move on a steep slope at
Mt Tibrogargan .. when they used a mobile phone to call for help.

A spokeswoman for the RACQ Careflight helicopter says the four were winched to safety
just after 11am (AEST).

The men .. all from Brisbane .. were unhurt.

AAP RTV rad/jmt

KEYWORD: MOUNTAIN (BRISBANE)

2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Costello dismisses claims of errors in budget


AAP General News (Australia)
02-01-2006
Fed: Costello dismisses claims of errors in budget

MELBOURNE, Feb 1 AAP - An analysis claiming the federal government's budget surplus
projections were out by an average of 255 per cent was "completely mistaken," Treasurer
Peter Costello said today.

Mr Costello slammed a report by the Business Council of Australia (BCA) which made
the claims based on five years of budget forecasts, saying the mathematics behind the
analysis was wrong.

"It shows you can use a statistic for any purpose," Mr Costello told ABC Radio.

His comments come after the government revised this financial year's predicted surplus
to $11.5 billion - $2.6 billion higher than predicted in May.

Mr Costello said out of a total budget of $200 billion, the variation was marginal
and nothing like the 255 per cent error as claimed in the BCA's analysis.

"Commonwealth revenues are about $200 billion, Commonwealth expenditures are about
$200 billion. The one per cent error is $2 billion and two per cent is $4 billion," he
said.

"I must say I thought it was quite inventive the way whoever did it (the analysis).

"... the author of the report was completely mistaken.

"We are trying to forecast what a financial outcome will be as measured in September of 2007.

"When you've got to take into account the oil price, the exchange rate, the US economy,
inflation, the all ordinaries, employment - you can get within one or two per cent - it
amazes me actually how accurate it is."

AAP cmb/gfr/cjh/de

KEYWORD: BUDGET COSTELLO

2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Monday, February 27, 2012

Enki

Enki West Asia The Sumerian water god of Eridu. Along with An the god of heaven, Enlil the air god, and Ninhursaga the earth mother, Enki was a creator deity. Priests often clothed themselves in a garment in the form of a fish, when officiating at rituals of purification, symbolic of the cleansing power of Enki as the god of lustration. The fish may refer to a Babylonian legend about Ea, the god's Akkadian title meaning‘ lord of the house of water,’ which was the sweet water beneath the ground named Abzu by the Sumerians. In remote times, according to this myth, when men lived in a lawless manner like beasts, Ea appeared from the sea. Part man and part fish, the double-headed god instructed men in handicrafts, farming, letters, laws, architecture, and magic. He softened the primitive rudeness and since that time nothing has been added to improve on his teaching. After a day of instruction Ea retired into the sea, whence the divine fish man made only three other appearances over a period of thousands of years.

Enki figures in a Sumerian myth which is a parallel to the Hebrew story of Adam and the Garden of Eden. In paradisal Dilmun, now identified with Bahrain in the Persian Gulf, the water god lived with Ninhursaga; it was a happy place, where animals did not harm one another, and neither sickness nor old age was known. The only thing wanting had been sweet water, and this Enki provided– his union with the earth mother turned the island into a fruitful garden. A quarrel arose when Enki devoured eight plants grown by Ninhursaga. She pronounced on him the curse of death. It was effective: sickness attacked eight parts of his body, to the dismay of the other gods. Enlil was powerless to arrest Enki's decline, the situation appeared hopeless. Then the fox spoke up. It offered to bring Ninhursaga back to Dilmun, providing there was suitable reward. This happened and the earth mother created eight deities to heal her consort's afflictions.

There are obvious similarities between this myth and the biblical picture of paradise. In Genesis‘ there went up a mist from the earth, and watered the whole ground,’ while the eating of forbidden plants is distinctly reminiscent of the tree of life in Eden. The very idea of a divine paradise, a garden of the gods, was of Sumerian origin. Eve, Adam's spouse, and ‘the lady of the rib,’ Ninti, the goddess created to heal Enki–s side, also have something in common. We know that there was ‘planted upon Abzu’ a sacred tree, kiskanu, which acted as the central point for rituals. Though the term ‘tree of life’ does not occur in any surviving Mesopotamian text, it can be deduced from pictorial representations of ritual observances that the tree played a significant role.

A Sumerian legend concerning the creation of man begins with the gods lamenting how difficult it was for them to get food. Roused from his slumbers, Enki acceded to their request for servants, and fashioned‘ out of clay’ mankind. It was he who gave warning of the deluge to Ziusudra, the pious King of Sippar. The gods, having tired of their mortal helpers, decided to annihilate the inhabitants of the earth.

Revised dietary guidelines still lack specifics

The announcement of the newly revised Dietary Guidelines for Americans earlier this year was broadcast live over the Internet by Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack and Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.

But not much has really changed since the 1980 release of the first edition of the guidelines when it comes to just how to empower consumers on making these important behavior and consumption changes.

It seems the government is focused as it should be on tackling the obesity crisis head-on. Two-thirds of Americans are overweight and 75 cents of every health care dollar is spent on obesity-related chronic disease.

Vilsack's mantra is, "Calories in, calories out." And while all science supports his premise, the shortfall of this year's guidelines has to do with how to communicate this effectively.

The two main focuses of the 2010 guidelines are maintaining calorie balance and eating nutrient-dense foods and beverages.

There were few surprises in the revised guidelines, which historically have shied away from naming specific foods. One that did surprise many: to drink water instead of sugary drinks.

It was widely anticipated that the general recommendation of 2,300 milligrams for sodium intake would be reduced, which it was not. Not officially, that is.

The sodium recommendation was reduced to 1,500 milligrams for those aged 51 and older, African Americans and those who have hypertension, type 2 diabetes or chronic kidney disease. Add up all these folks and guess what? They make up half the adult population in the United States.

The average daily sodium intake among U.S. adults is about 3,400 milligrams.

The guidelines also say to significantly reduce the intake of foods containing added sugars and solid fats, as these contribute excess calories and few, if any, nutrients, as well as to lower the intake of refined grains with added sugars, solid fat and sodium.

The guidelines offer a shout-out to vitamin B12. A substantial proportion of individuals ages 50 years and older may have a reduced ability to absorb naturally occurring vitamin B12. The 50+ crowd is encouraged to include foods that are fortified with vitamin B12, such as cereals, or to take dietary supplements.

But here's the problem — how do we get shoppers to read the guidelines and embrace them? We asked our Facebook fans what they thought should be included in the USDA's new guidelines.

Joan Clawson said every label should say "gluten-free" or not. Sheri Rufo Iodice wonders if the daily recommended physical activity time frames will be clarified or adjusted.

Over the past couple of years, we have learned a lot from social networking and apps and have seen how First Lady Michelle Obama's "Let's Move" program has used both quite effectively.

But it does not seem like much effort is being put behind the implementation of the guidelines. They once again offer up the "what" but are missing the "how." And that's the real need. We know people are fat, and we know we are not eating as well as we should nor exercising as much as we should.

Just last month, the NPD Group released survey findings that said fewer people are interested in reading the nutrition facts label on food packages. We still have much work to do.

Phil Lempert is the editor of SupermarketGuru.com and reports on the latest trends on NBC's "Today" show, ABC's "The View" and local Chicago news programs. E-mail Phil@Supermarket Guru.com.

The government's recently revised Dietary Guidelines suggest that Americans choose water over sugary drinks. | afp/Getty imagesPAUL J.RICHARDS