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  • When You Finally Go It Alone

    Linda Stern | Oct 20, 2007 11:47 AM
    Ilustration by Mark Matcho for Newsweek

    Oct. 29, 2007 issue

    Tanya Hahnel, 24, earns more than $25,000 a year helping Boston-area families find affordable housing. She has health insurance, good benefits, no credit-card debt and a frugal lifestyle. Still, Hahnel bartends at night so she can afford to fly home to the Washington, D.C., area for Christmas. Her friends, many of whom are working hourly jobs without health benefits, are faring worse. “If you’re making $7 an hour plus tips, and you don’t have insurance and something bad happens, your credit is just ruined,” she says. “Everybody I know is really struggling.”

    You don’t have to be irresponsible or bad with plastic to get slammed when you’re young, out on your own for the first time. Here’s why it’s tough: starter jobs come with low salaries and, increasingly, without health insurance. Rents are high, and there’s a litany of hidden expenses in the life of a twentysomething: deadbeat roommates who “share” utilities but never actually write their checks; friends’ weddings that require costly dresses and travel; security deposits and agent fees every time you move; medical care that’s not covered by insurance; needing everything (furniture, work clothes, wheels, kitchen gear) at the same time, and, yes, college loans.

    But there’s hope. Every generation faces hard times when it starts out; there are some new financial tools that can help you climb into the black without an allowance from Mom and Dad. Here’s how to get started when you’re getting started.

    More
  • The Checklist: Oct. 29, 2007 issue

    Newsweek | Oct 20, 2007 11:44 AM
    Oct. 29, 2007 issue Our top picks for the week. Rent “Breathless,” Jean-Luc Godard’s rule-breaking 1959 new-wave gangster romance, with Jean-Paul Belmondo as a petty crook channeling Bogart and Jean Seberg as an amoral, heartbreaking American in Paris.... More
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  • Generosity Can Pay Off

    Linda Stern | Oct 20, 2007 11:43 AM
    Oct. 29, 2007 issue Instead of scribbling a few last-minute checks between Thanksgiving and New Year’s, why not be a little bit more methodical about your charitable giving this year? That can make your donated dollars go further, and—in a year when the... More
  • Avoid Your Own Case Of ‘Nannygate’

    Newsweek | Oct 20, 2007 11:40 AM
    Oct. 29, 2007 issue Putting household employees “on the books” used to be a process that only a CPA could understand. In recent years, the IRS has simplified its rules and made all the forms accessible online, though the task is still far from simple.... More
  • Food: Top Turkeys

    Kathryn Joyce | Oct 20, 2007 11:35 AM
    Oct. 29, 2007 issue As Thanksgiving approaches, a panel of 24 tasters sampled eight turkeys and rated them on flavor, texture, moistness and “ overall appeal. ” Surprisingly, frozen birds often bested fresh ones. 1. Rubashkin’s Aaron’s Best PRICE: $1.99... More
  • Nice Rump! A Guide To The Birds Of Fall.

    Paul Tolme | Oct 20, 2007 11:34 AM
    Oct. 29, 2007 issue The autumn migration is an ideal time to go birding because species gather in large numbers as they wing their way to warmer climes in search of food. With the crisp air and colorful foliage, it is easy to see why avid birders consider... More
  • When To Be Wary Of ‘Free Wi-Fi’

    Linda Stern | Oct 20, 2007 11:32 AM
    Oct. 29, 2007 issue All those coffeeshop, airport and hotel Wi-Fi networks are just so darned convenient ... maybe a little too convenient. Consumer groups are warning mobile computer users that some of those Wi-Fi networks may be fake, designed by hackers... More
  • When Baby Catches A Cold

    Karen Springen | Oct 20, 2007 11:30 AM
    Oct. 29, 2007 issue What’s a sniffly baby to do? Earlier this month, major manufacturers of cough and cold medicines for children ages 2 and younger voluntarily pulled their products off store shelves. Now the FDA is weighing an outright ban on cold remedies... More
  • That’s Some Scary Stuff

    Raina Kelley | Oct 20, 2007 11:28 AM
    Oct. 29, 2007 issue Remember when Halloween was just a simple holiday when kids dressed up and got candy? Well, move over, Santa. Americans are expected to spend $5 billion this year on costumes, candy and decorations. Here are Tip Sheet’s recommendations... More
  • Road Test: The Little Car That Could

    Tara Weingarten | Oct 20, 2007 11:16 AM
    Bold Boxster: The entry-level Boxster stands up to the more posh Porsches Oct. 29, 2007 issue Porsche may be a luxury brand, but its entry-level Boxster is anything but a cheap version of the real thing. And if you’re worried about fuel consumption, the... More
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