Being a lawyer who has practiced for over two decades, I feel I have some relevant advice. Law school has changed. When I went there were no scholarships. Now, there are, but there are not a lot. Everyone focuses on the T14 (it is T14 because of Georgetown Law, my alma mater). But, law is regional. I practice in Tennessee. While I went to law school at Georgetown, all of my colleagues went to the University of Memphis or Ole Miss. They are all very good lawyers. If you want to work in BIG LAW or government, then maybe you need to go to a T14 law school. If you want to work in a different environment…not so much. Know, though, that law is DRASTICALLY changing. AI is beginning to leave an impact. You are, a minimum, of seven years from practicing law. In seven years, AI will impact the legal employment market, just consider that.
My advice would be to find an inexpensive public university that you like and start there. Do well. Take a major that trains you to write and think critically (take a logic and public speaking class at a minimum). Do well on the LSAT. Minimize student loan debt. Luckily, you have Indiana University and Purdue in state. Both a wonderful universities. Apply to both.
Why focus on student loan debt…see my comment on scholarships in law school above. It took me sixteen years to payoff my law school debt (and I had a great interest rate below 3%). But debt has an opportunity cost. That was money each month I had to pay that COULD have gone to something else. It is hard to understand that when you are young, but opportunity costs matter. Who you are today is not who you will be in four or seven years. Good luck and best wishes.