254 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY-I3TI ANNUAL REPORT tions), at Winter Park, with about 20 instructors and 200 students; and St. Leo College (Catholic) at St. Leo in Pasco County. All of these are located in regions of much scenic beauty, and they draw a good deal of their patronage from colder climates. NOTED PERSONS If "Who's Who in America" is a reliable criterion, central Florida leads the rest of the State in number of noted persons, as it does in schools and many other things. The 1920 edition of that work lists 41 persons who have homes in central Florida, which is about one to each 7,000 of the population, as compared with about one to 10,000 in the whole State, and one to 4,500 for the whole United States. If whites alone were considered the ratio would be about one to 5,ooo in central Florida, one to 7,000 in the whole State, and one to 4,000 in the whole country. Just how many natives of our area are listed it would be impossible to tell without examining over 20,000 biographical sketches, as they are not indexed by birthplaces.