WASHINGTON AP – If things had gone according to plan, Lindsay Murphy would be a big-city tax lawyer by now. Instead, the recent law school graduate found herself doing legal aid, listening to complaints about raw sewage bubbling up into the bathtubs of a Mississippi Delta housing project.

Murphy is among hundreds of newly minted lawyers who’ve been forced by the recession to take a detour on their way to the nation’s top firms, spending up to a year helping out nonprofits for as little as a third of the salary they’d expected.