State Representation?

<p>Is Texas well-represented at Princeton, and if not, would I have any sort of small advantage by being a Texan?</p>

<p>Texas is well represented, and applying from there will not give you an advantage.</p>

<p>Number</a> of Students in the Class of 2011 by Geographic Region</p>

<p>lol I wish I lived in Wyoming so bad...</p>

<p>Plus, think of those National Merit Cutoffs!! 175 for Commended Student lol</p>

<p>wow weasel thanks for that link that was pretty amazing...</p>

<p>Are you serious, I thought all 50 states definitely get represented but some apparently have like 1 or 2 (or even 0) for the WHOLE state...amazing.</p>

<p>EDIT: and some have like 150!! Big discrepancies there..</p>

<p>lolz check out NJ because of it's direct access to Princeton: like 200+</p>

<p>Wyoming and Montana haha</p>

<p>Is it too late to move??</p>

<p>Rofl, I hope you're kidding.</p>

<p>I live in Arizona...is that an advantage? I saw the state representation map, but I would like some opinions on Arizona's representation and how that might affect my admission (if any). </p>

<p>Thanks</p>

<p>what about Kansas?</p>