I should have looked into that, but I honestly had zero desire to be involved with math or (especially) stats once I had the required courses done. Then, in my last semesters before finishing, I discover a little emphasized (at my school...the econ program is seriously into the heterodox, which in this case, means a lot of the touchy-feely "making money makes other people sad, so let's be Marxists" BS, and less of the mathy, actual skill type stuff,) program within the Econ department that introduced me to Econometrics, and economic analysis tools as a whole, and I changed course from a future MBA to a future MStat, and love it.That sounds like my experience as well. We took so many math courses that many of us could have gotten a math minor with another quarter or two of coursework. I was already behind schedule at that point so I elected to GTFO and get a job insteadInteresting. I got my B.S. in Econ, but I'm about to start my MStat in Econometrics. Things like the hypergeometric distribution post you made and such just made me figure you had done something along those lines, but given what the engineering students I've been in classes with (I had to take Calc 1-3 as pre-reqs for my masters...Calculus for Economists didn't cut it, tons of various engineering majors in those calc classes,) I shouldn't be surprised.
Of course, by the time I was taking my calc classes, I already had my bachelors. They made me take Trig before I could take Calc, even though I had already done Calc for Economists.