• Annual Financial Report: 2016

    RECEIPTS Membership Dues $3,855 Donations $300 Horizons Ticket Sales $8,004 Lannutti Lecture $1,586 Total Receipts $13,745 EXPENDITURES Fees $539 History Fair Award $200 Printing/Copying $118 Gold Medal Award $1,486 Horizons $4,587 Website $2,805 Lannutti Lecture $1,815 Total Expenditures $11,550 SURPLUS OF RECEIPTS OVER EXPENDITURES $2,195 NET ASSETS – BEGINNING OF PERIOD $16,954 NET ASSETS – END OF PERIOD $19,149 BREAKDOWN OF NET ASSETS – END OF PERIOD Lannutti Fund $5,035 Unrestricted Fund $14,114 $19,149

  • Annual Report: 2016

    This report is a summary of the 2015–2016 Administrative year (May 1st to April 30th). This year’s focus was on our youth. We engaged in several activities in an attempt to lead middle and high school students towards a greater appreciation of science. We held a reception for public and private school science teachers at which we outlined requirements that qualify student projects for the Regional Science and Engineering Fair. We had a table at the Annual Tallahassee Science Festival held at Lake Ella and invited students to ask questions about science fair projects and challenged them to participate in the Science Fairs. This was an opportunity to dialog with…

  • Horizons 2016

    February – Chris Koenig Click to View PDF March – James Rice Click to View PDF   April – Tom Seeley Click to View PDF   May – Ken Ford Click to View PDF     February 25 • Chris Koenig, Ph.D.Deep Science:  The Secret Lives of GroupersCome hear from one of the top grouper researchers in the country fascinating details about one of the largest and most curious classes of fish in the ocean. Discover what Dr. Chris Koenig has learned from studying various species of grouper for more than 30 years. Challenger Learning Center – 200 South Duval Street, Kleman Plaza March 24 • James RiceWheels on Mars:  The Adventures…

  • Robots & The Wright Brothers

    Topic of May 25 Horizons Talk FRANK STEPHENSON SPECIAL TO THE DEMOCRAT Self-driving cars, death-dealing drones, robots performing surgery, computers writing their own codes–not even George Orwell imagined a world where Big Brother could be a super-smart machine instead of a faceless, mind-robbing bureaucrat. But such is our world today as humans face a future where robots are predicted to eventually take over countless tasks that since the dawn of man have been done strictly by flesh and bone. Whether we like it or not, The Age of Artificial Intelligence is upon us, with consequences that may be liberating, terrifying or merely annoying but surely profound. Are recent dire predictions…