REUTERS — Some aspiring attorneys might not have to take the Law School Admission Test to apply to law school in the future. The Law School Admission Council — which administers the LSAT and maintains a centralized application system for law schools — said Wednesday that it is designing a program to enable would-be law students to apply without taking a standardized test. The new program won’t undermine or replace the LSAT as the main pathway to apply to law school, said Council vice president of product development and business intelligence Kaitlynn Griffith. Most of the Council’s annual revenue comes from fees associated with the LSAT and law school applications. The LSAT already faces competition from the Graduate Record Examination, which nearly 80 law schools now accept. The program would let undergraduate students at participating colleges and universities complete a tailored curriculum before graduation, then be eligible to apply to law schools without an LSAT score. The goal is to broaden the pipeline and pathways to law school, Griffith said.