<p>If you already know where I am applying, this will not work, but if not, you should be able to figure out the ten schools to which I have already applied from these clues.</p>
<p>They are in 9 different states
7 are private and 3 are public
Conference Affiliations (as of Fall 2014):
3 are in the SEC
2 are in the ACC
2 are in the A-10
1 is in the Ivy League
1 is in the American Athletic Conference
1 is in the Big 12
I applied to at least one school in every state in the South except for TX, AR, MS, KY, and GA (I am not counting DE, MD, and WV here)
I have not applied to a school located north of 40 degrees latitude
I applied to only one school outside of the South
The school in the American played in C-USA this year
At least one school currently plays in the SoCon
I did not apply to a public ACC school
I did not apply to a school in a town named Stillwater, Auburn, Winston-Salem or Knoxville</p>
<p>3 are in the SEC (Vanderbilt, Alabama, USC)
2 are in the ACC (Miami, Duke)
2 are in the A-10 (Richmond, Davidson)
1 is in the Ivy League (Penn)
1 is in the American Athletic Conference (Tulane)
1 is in the Big 12 (Oklahoma)</p>
<p>Both of you got it. I have only been to some of them so far. I do not need a school to be as Conservative as I am, but I just need one to not be of the far left. In fact, while I am Conservative (both fiscally and socially), I am not at all religious, so a heavily religious place is not right for me at all.</p>
<p>I’m not doubting that these schools are conservative in some sense, and I am not associating conservative with traditional religions. I’m trying to understand what it was about these places that makes you think they are conservative.</p>
<p>My high school is very socially liberal, so I am somewhat watered down with what I expect (politically) from a school. Though, Haverford struck me as way too liberal when I visited.</p>