I agree that numbers are numbers, and meaningless without context. Focus on programs which cover surgical services that send them at least a few of the most common regular excision specimens from at least the common specialties (GI, head & neck, thoracic, breast, GU..). Seeing a lot of derm, cyto, biopsies, etc. is all well and good, but not at the expense of never seeing a whipple specimen. But you don't have to get a whipple/prostate/colon/kidney/lung, etc., every single day to still get "adequate" exposure and experience.