For a Math major, Wash U in St.Louis or UNC?

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This is a good point but there are several notable exceptions like Duke and Princeton.</p>

<p>[Duke</a> University Admissions: Class of 2013 Profile](<a href=“http://admissions.duke.edu/jump/applying/who_2013profile.html]Duke”>http://admissions.duke.edu/jump/applying/who_2013profile.html)
Only 12% of Duke students come from NC and the overall geographical distribution of the student body is incredibly balanced with 22% coming from the Southeast, 18% from the Mid-Atlantic, 12% from the Northeast and 14% from the West. The top 5 represented states in the Duke student body are California, New York, North Carolina, Florida and Texas the last time I checked.</p>

<p>[Princeton</a> University | Admission Statistics](<a href=“http://www.princeton.edu/admission/applyingforadmission/admission_statistics/]Princeton”>http://www.princeton.edu/admission/applyingforadmission/admission_statistics/)
Only about 13% of Princeton students come from NJ and the most represented state in the student body is California just like at Duke. PA, NJ and NY only make up about 25% of the Princeton student body as supposed to 40% at Penn.</p>

<p>WUSTL, Princeton and Duke are far more geographically diverse than state schools but other privates are more variable.</p>