<p>Random, random question: WHY are you applying to mostly state universities, for which you are obviously out-of-state on most of them?</p>
<p>Your chances are good for Texas, being state (I think, right?). For UConn, you have decent chances, but you're third on the list: they take CT residents first, and then preference for New Englanders who don't have an in-state law school. </p>
<p>Maryland you should have a good chance at; if you find their website, they do have an LSAT/GPA grid which you can use to find out how many people with your stats applied and were accepted last application cycle.</p>
<p>So my random advice: look beyond state schools. You are certainly in the running for all of them statistically, but you'll have to pay out-of-state tuition at most of them (at least for the first year). UConn will let you get residency if you change your vehicle registration & license over to CT - and that only takes a year. Not sure how the others work... and you might end up paying for two years of out-of-state tuition, simply because you'll just miss the 1-year cutoff when you start your 2L year. You might not be able to claim residency if your parents are helping out with tuition.</p>
<p>Beyond that, there is a HUGE relationship between location of the law school and where graduates tend to get jobs. Focus your search on where you want to work. You'll have a much easier time getting a job in Texas coming out of schools like UTexas, Houston, Emory, Duke, Washington and Lee, and UVA than you would from Utah, Maryland, Minnesota, and UConn.</p>
<p>Sorry that I cannot help more with your actual question... most of the schools I looked at were on the East coast.</p>