Could I get into Vanderbilt University?

ACT Scores (I know Vandy doesn’t superscore this, and I definitely intend to retake):
Composite:29
English: 32
Science:30
Math:22 (Terrible, I was so sad when I saw this, main reason I’m retaking)
Reading:30
Writing: Not Yet Taken (I know I have to for Vandy, second reason I’m retaking.

GPA: 4.0 Unweighted, 4.36 Unweighted (should be in or close to 5 by graduation.)
Honors Classes throughout High School: Hon. Algebra 1& 2, Hon. English 1,2, & 3, Hon. Chemistry, Hon. Physical Science, Hon. Biology, Hon. World Geography, possibly more. A’s in all.
Current Classes: Personal Finance(School didn’t offer honors), A.P. Calculus AB, A.P. English 4, Hon. ABLS, ACT Math Review( for obvious reasons), etc.

A.P Courses Taken: Physics AB- 2 on test (ashamed), A.P.U.S.H- 4 on test ( Not high enough for credit, but hopefully enough to brag about.

Class Rank: 3, potential Salutatorian if straight A’s.

Extracurriculars:
Chior- Mid-State Bass 1 SATB, 2nd Alternate for All-State Men;s Chior 2015/ may make All-State this year.
Chess- President of Chess Club this year.
Work at community center of summer, start volunteer work soon, should have 150+ hours by November.
Recieved School’s Best Actor Award Sophmore and Junior Year ( couldn’t fit class in schedule this year)
Am member of “Don’t Text and Drive” Campaign at school, currently writing article for local newspaper.

So if I score higher on the ACT and the essays and the interviews, is there any chance I could get into Vandy? Also, if it happens to cross your mind, please list any other schools that may be good for me. Thanks!

Get a better ACT (32 minimum) and apply early decision 1 or ED 2 if you want to get in. Regular decision is a crap shoot for anyone, even nearly perfect legacy applicants.
Applicants from schools near me get in rather easily with weaker stats (32 ACT, 2200ish SAT) provided that they apply ED.

The downside about ED: you could be setting yourself up for financial disaster if you end up on the hook for $65K a year and no financial aid or scholarships.

Think carefully about this and then apply to your in-state schools.