By JUSTIN POPE, AP Education Writer
BOSTON - Maj. Rachel VanLandingham's job sounds like one of the toughest in the military — persuading law school graduates to pass on high-paying private sector jobs and become Air Force judge advocates for about $40,000 a year.
But VanLandingham, chief of recruiting for the Air Force Judge Advocate General Corps, says she often succeeds in luring the bright young lawyers that the military urgently needs. Often, she sells the career by talking face-to-face with students about the opportunities being a JAG afforded her to travel and make courtroom arguments just two months after passing the bar exam.
"I wish I drove a BMW and I don't, but that's something money can't replace," she said of the experience. "And I can't convey that to a law student without sitting down with them in an interview."
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"These are people who could start at six figures easy (at a private law firm," she said. "The only way I can answer their questions is to go to the law schools."
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