Frank Sigsworth Deceased Frank was born January 18th, 1929, the youngest of three children of Frank and Ethel (Dorsey) Sigsworth. He attended elementary school at , Charlottetown , high school at Prince of Wales College, and completed his first two degrees, a B.Sc . and B.A . at University in 1950 and 1951 respectively. Frank Sigsworth was one of the more interesting members of the class of 1951, but he died early with brilliant promise unfulfilled. He joined the class after completing 4th year at PWC, and in only two years had established himself as a campus figure at SDU. Always ready with a quip, he could turn almost any situation into a laugh. He once traveled to a meeting in Saint John with four other men, in the hands of an unskilled driver. After one particularly dangerous episode rounding a curve in the wrong lane, his companions were rigid with fright and Frank broke the tension by murmuring, "It's almost enough to make a man turn Catholic ." His classmates will remember the formal incineration of his Freshman mathematics text in May of his Senior year, when he finally crossed that deadly hurdle to his first degree, or his delightful syllogism from the Red and White. "Some athletes play basketball, but Charlie______plays basketball, ergo, Charlie______is an athlete." After earning his second degree at SDU Frank enrolled in the M.A .(English) program at the University of Montreal, while teaching mathematics and physics at Loyola College. He then entered the Canadian Armed Forces, serving with the rank of Captain until deciding on the study of law at Dalhousie University, which awarded him a Law School Entrance