<p>Far too lazy to read through the entire thread, but some of the better known ones are:</p>
<p>Bard
Wesleyan
Mount Holyoke
Smith
Hampshire
Bennington
NYU
Simon's Rock
Yale
Berkeley
Emerson
Ithaca
Wells
Hartford
Drew
Hampshire
Brandeis
Bryn Mawr</p>
<p>ETA: Macalester, College of the Atlantic, Bates, Marlboro, UVM, Reed, Pitzer, New College of Florida, and Sarah Lawrence.</p>
<p>If you want any more recommendations, please let me know. This is a really important matter that should be discussed more often among GLBT students.</p>
<p>Also, since this is also important, the Princeton Review list of the least-accepting colleges can be found here:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.princetonreview.com/college/research/rankings/rankingDetails.asp?categoryID=3&topicID=25%5B/url%5D">http://www.princetonreview.com/college/research/rankings/rankingDetails.asp?categoryID=3&topicID=25</a></p>
<p>UGA isn't as gay friendl</p>
<p>Does anyone know anything about UNC-Chapel Hill?</p>
<p>I assume they're fairly liberal, but we ARE in the South, and I DO live in the Bible belt...I really don't want a roommate who's going to spend all semester cursading for my lost soul.</p>
<p><em>smirks</em> Although my being bi would be only part of the issue...</p>
<p>Does anyone know if James Madison, College of of William and Mary, UVA, West Virginia U, Tulane, or USC are gay friendly??</p>
<p>As for Emory-Atlanta is very liberal for the South so I would assume that most colleges there would be gay-friendly</p>
<p>I attend UNC. It is not the "typical Southern school." Extremely liberal, and fairly gay friendly, although you do have your share of bigots, but I don't think there is a school on Earth that is completely free of them. You should have no problem finding your niche.</p>
<p>Bob Jones and Southern Methodist U are pretty gay friendly. No seriously the University of the Arts has to be 85% gay because all of the gay people that I know are going there.</p>