For Sanjay Chhablani, the price tag on his dream job was $102,000. For Tammy W. Sun, it was about $75,000.
Those numbers aren’t their annual salaries. Chhablani took that much of a pay cut; Sun chose not to return to a high-paying law firm job.
For Sanjay Chhablani, the price tag on his dream job was $102,000. For Tammy W. Sun, it was about $75,000. Those numbers aren't their annual salaries. Chhablani took that much of a pay cut; Sun chose not to return to a high-paying law firm job. They're new lawyers at the Southern Center for Human Rights, a nonprofit public interest legal project that defends death row inmates, fights for better conditions in prisons and challenges discrimination in the criminal justice system.
October 14, 1999 at 12:00 AM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
For Sanjay Chhablani, the price tag on his dream job was $102,000. For Tammy W. Sun, it was about $75,000.
Those numbers aren’t their annual salaries. Chhablani took that much of a pay cut; Sun chose not to return to a high-paying law firm job.
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