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Show Frani Nishiguchi/ 11-19-84 s4:52 bewildered. When we were coming home from Tremonton one day, and he says, --He•s awful quiet. said, what•s the matter, son? And he says, Dad,you don•t expect me to doeverything the girls do, do you? I said, what do you mean. He said, well, getting involved in all these student activities, you don•t expect me to do that, do you. I said, Son, let me tell you something. You don•t have to walk in anybody•s shadow. You cast your own. If you don•t want to, you don•t have to. If you want to, that•s fine. But you go the direction you want to go. Phew! That•s a relief Dad. Well, you can imagine the pressure. The youngest kid. he•s always been overshadowed by his sisters. And I can understand that feeling. I was the tailen~h8¥1 iMe family too. And! knew I had to walk in some pretty big footsteps to follow my brothers and sisters. And. That monkey. He went over there. And he got involved. Peggy had got him in valved in student leadership workshop. Over there. And he got involved with some good youngpeople over there. And they really brought him out. He blossomed in those few weeks. He--all the time he was a youngester, growing up, he said he was going to go on a mission for the church. And ·then when he got to be a senior inhigh school, that was the furtherest thing from his mind. In fact, all of these children, all of them said they weren•t going to go. \~hen he got involved over there, why he got involved with some real good groups andhe got involved with the student there and -- about mid winter he come and said, Dad, what would you~y if I told you I wanted to go on a mission. And I said, |