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HKN Coat of Arms See
below for the descriptions. |

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The shield is crested with a Wheststone bridge, with the associatiion's
colors of scarlet and navy blue entwined beneath. Our emblem, the<
Wheatstone bridge, is an accurate precision electrical instrument, but
the significant analogy which we draw from it for Eta Kappa Nu is the fact
that it is in balance when it is correctly adjusted. This is what we
strive for as members of Eta Kappa Nu: to lead a balanced life, a life in
which scholarship, character, and personality are jointly developed.
Remember, then, when you look at the Eta Kappa Nu emblem, the Wheatsone
bridge is symbolic of a balanced human being. |

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The band of silver has been charged with three cubes of magnetite to represent,
and thus remind you of, our three great requirements: common sense, an industrious spirit, and a congenial nature. |

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The mighty hand of Jupiter was selected as being symbolic of the founding
chapter, with a blade of lighting for each of the ten members. The field
is blue, signifying the loyalty with which they performed their task. |

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The Caduceus, wand of Mercury, was preferred by our founder, Brother Carr,
as the symbol of this Association. Therefore, upon the honor point of the
shield is placed the Caduceus as a memorial to him who organized this
society, in which so many now enjoy membership. Its field is scarlet,
symbolizing the zeal with which Brother Carr projected his idea. |

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Beneath the shield is a ribbon bearing the name ETA KAPPA NU. In early
Greece there was a philosopher who discovered that if he rubbed a piece of
amber with a cloth he experienced the phenomena that we know as static
electreicity. The Greek name for amber is spelled nlektpov (Eta Lambda Epsilon
Kappa Tau Rho Omicron Nu). From this word the English language derives the
words: electricity, electron, and electronic. And from this name we derive
our name -- we use the first, the fourth, and the last letters, namely Eta,
Kappa, and Nu. The symbols used on the emblem are the early forms of these
Greek letters. |
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