<p>I am really interested in Vanderbilt, UNC Chapel Hill, and University of Virginia! I live in Georgia, so I feel comfortable in the South, but any school in the U.S. is fine.</p>
<p>I’d add Emory and Rice into the mix as well.</p>
<p>Dartmouth is not conservative.</p>
<p>Which, even if it is true, does not make it conservative. I think the OP should look at other southern schools like Wake Forest, or maybe Miami of Ohio.</p>
<p>I feel like I’m a rep for Furman recently, but Furman’s conservative, great academics, but admittedly much smaller than the rest.</p>
<p>Bucknell University</p>
<p>Those are all very good schools but incredibly difficult to get into (especially as an OOS applicant for UNC CH & UVA). I would agree with some of the other schools suggested such as Wake Forest and Furman. In addition, I also suggest SMU, Davidson (much smaller) and Elon University in NC as a fall back. Another of your post says you would like to be a doctor–Wake Forest has a great med school so I am assuming they have strong “pre-med” programs for undergrads. Good luck!</p>
<p>If you think UNC CH and UVA are hard out of state, and you think that they have a better chance at Davidson, you may be a little crazy, haha. Davidson’s extremely hard to get into. Much more selective than Furman, and Wake Forest, and definitely more selective than Elon. Not to say it’s not a great school, but it’s just as hard as UVA and UNC-CH OOS.</p>
<p>I’d add Tulane to the list. The school has non-binding EA.</p>
<p>How about the University of Miami and the New College Florida? They’re really good schools too.</p>
<p>I don’t see anything from the OP about wanting a conservative school. Maybe a post was deleted?</p>