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Lonely Planet’s top places to go in 2025
  + stars: | 2024-10-23 | by ( Maureen O'Hare | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +5 min
CNN —Grab your passport and your sunscreen, Lonely Planet has just revealed its 30 must-visit destinations for 2025 as well as a brand-new rundown of top 10 travel trends. Cameroon, Lithuania and Fiji got nods as country destinations and Chiriqui in Panama and Valais in Switzerland were classed as regions with rizz. For cities, “number one on the list this year is Toulouse, France,” Nitya Chambers, Lonely Planet’s SVP, content and executive editor, tells CNN. Train-hopping is the top travel trend identified by Lonely Planet in this 15th edition of its best-selling “Best in Travel” book. Christopher Horsley/Getty ImagesLocal flavors and outdoor adventureThe northern Thai city of Chiang Mai weaves into Lonely Planet’s local flavors travel trend.
Persons: ” Nitya Chambers, It’s, Chambers, , Christopher Horsley, Chiang Mai, , rawness, it’s, , Justin Foulkes, Bulgaria Chiang Mai Organizations: CNN, Lonely Planet’s, Lonely, Getty, Sustainable Development, , Regions, Cities, Brazil Palma de Mallorca, Cameroon Lithuania Fiji Laos Kazakhstan Paraguay Trinidad & Tobago Vanuatu Slovakia Armenia Regions Low, Coastal Locations: Bansko, Bulgaria, Osaka, Japan, Edmonton, Canada, Cameroon, Lithuania, Fiji, Chiriqui, Panama, Valais, Switzerland, Toulouse, France, Puducherry, Pondicherry, Chennai, Vanuatu, Ambrym, Christopher, Thai, Pacific Islands, England, East Anglia, Turkey, Giresun, Coastal Georgia, Cities Toulouse, France Pondicherry, India Bansko, Thailand Genoa, Italy Pittsburgh, USA Osaka, Japan Curitiba, Brazil, Spain Edmonton, Cameroon Lithuania Fiji Laos Kazakhstan Paraguay Trinidad & Tobago Vanuatu Slovakia, Nepal Chiriqui, Panama Launceston, Valley, Australia Valais, Turkiye Bavaria, Germany, Anglia, Hood, Columbia, Oregon
Opinion | This Is Not the Way to Help Depressed Teenagers
  + stars: | 2023-11-18 | by ( ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +3 min
Teenagers, who are still developing their identities, are especially prone to take psychological labels to heart. Plus, many of the skills taught in these programs were developed for people coping with severe mental illness, not everyday stresses. Such interventions work best with steady, consistent, hands-on support from a dedicated therapist. To be sure, psychologists have done some important and innovative work making mental health interventions more broadly accessible. But although such offerings fill gaps in our mental health infrastructure, they cannot take the place of more time- and resource-intensive forms of care.
Persons: , Foulkes, aren’t, they’d, Jessica Schleider Organizations: Northwestern University Locations:
MANCHESTER, England (AP) — Bobby Charlton, an English soccer icon who survived a plane crash that decimated a Manchester United team destined for greatness to become the heartbeat of his country's 1966 World Cup-winning team, has died. “Sir Bobby was a hero to millions, not just in Manchester, or the United Kingdom, but wherever football is played around the world,” United said. “There was always one great hope — the return to greatness of my beloved club,” Charlton said. The biggest prize of his club career arrived in 1968 as United became the first English club to become champion of Europe. But Charlton is perhaps best known for being part of the England team that won the World Cup.
Persons: — Bobby Charlton, Charlton, Wayne Rooney, “ Sir Bobby, ” United, , Sir Bobby, Alex Ferguson, ” “ Bobby Charlton, ” Ferguson, George Best, Denis Law, United, Busby, , Bill Foulkes, Rooney, Ryan Giggs, , David Beckham, Ferguson, Queen Elizabeth II, ” Robert Charlton, Bobby, Jack, ” Charlton, Robert —, Charlton’s, Matt Busby groaning, Duncan Edwards, Eusebio, Bobby Charlton, Nobby Stiles, Marcus Rashford, Norma, ___ Organizations: Manchester United, United, England, , Portugal, West Germany, Wigan, Irish, Waterford, Best, Charlton, Leeds, Red Star Belgrade, FA, Benfica Locations: MANCHESTER, England, United, Manchester, United Kingdom, Munich, Preston, Old Trafford, United’s, Ashington, Germany, Europe, Portugal
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBrunswick CEO on the boating consumer, rising rates and autonomous docking boatDavid Foulkes, Brunswick CEO, joins 'Power Lunch' to discuss the state of the consumer, its autonomous docking boat, and more.
Persons: David Foulkes Organizations: Brunswick Locations: Brunswick
California lawmakers have sent a bill to Governor Newsom's desk that would require all large businesses in the state to provide a detailed accounting of their carbon emissions, including their Scope 3, or supply chain emissions. The bill, if adopted, would be the first of its kind in the nation to require carbon emissions reporting. Apple and Google , massive technology companies headquartered in California, support the move to require carbon accounting. Meanwhile, the California Chamber of Commerce opposes the bill, saying requiring emissions accounting will increase business operation costs for businesses and consumers. Also, Dickinson said that carbon accounting can be a helpful process for companies.
Persons: Newsom's, Bill, Gavin Newsom, SEC hasn't, Newsom, Al Gore, Gore, Google, Mike Foulkes, Scott Wiener, Apple, Foulkes, Paul Dickinson, Dickinson Organizations: California Senate, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, SEC, CNBC, Apple, Google, California Chamber, Commerce, of Commerce, Bloomberg Locations: California
Apple "strongly believes" that companies' corporate climate emissions disclosures should include the emissions that come from their supply chain, or what's called Scope 3 emissions. "To ensure accuracy and transparency, we strongly believe that companies' carbon emissions disclosures should include their Scope 3 emissions," Foulkes wrote. In the letter, Apple acknowledges some amount of uncertainty in reporting Scope 3 emissions due to available data at this time. In the letter, Apple also backed third party oversight of the emissions reporting. Apple's support of Scope 3 emissions in California, where the company is headquartered, comes at a time when federal regulators are considering requiring some level of corporate climate disclosures.
Persons: Mike Foulkes, Scott Wiener, Bill, Foulkes, Apple, Wiener, SEC hasn't Organizations: Apple, Twitter, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, SEC Locations: California
The Apple Inc logo is seen at the entrance to the Apple store in Brussels, Belgium November 28, 2022. loadingWiener's bill would require public and private companies with annual revenue in excess of $1 billion who do business in traditionally climate-conscious California to disclose independently verified data on their planet-warming emissions. "Thank you, Apple, for making clear that this is doable (and) a critically important piece of climate action," Wiener wrote. A separate bill under discussion would require companies operating in California, with $500 million in revenue, to report on climate-related financial risks such as whether they have budgeted for increased compliance and insurance costs. In its letter to Wiener, Apple commends his bill's attempt to require companies to measure and report indirect emissions linked to their supply chains and end-users, known as Scope 3.
Persons: Yves Herman Acquire, we've, Michael Foulkes, Scott Wiener, Wiener, Apple, Isla Binnie, Aurora Ellis Organizations: Apple, REUTERS, California Senate, Adobe, Ikea, Microsoft, Thomson Locations: Brussels, Belgium, California
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBrunswick Corp. CEO David Foulkes goes one-on-one with Jim CramerBrunswick Corp. CEO David Foulkes joins 'Mad Money' host Jim Cramer to talk sales numbers, luxury item demand, and more.
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