Mr. Ruby. More or less, yes, but I am not what you call Orthodox. The Orthodox, you know, just like other religions, they go every chance they get more or less. But I am not of the Orthodox.
Mr. Griffin. But the temple or synagogue that you belong to, when does it regularly hold services?
Mr. Ruby. It probably holds them—I don’t know. I know they have them Saturday. Saturday they always have services. I don’t think they have services there Friday night. They don’t have services on Friday night as far as I know.
Mr. Griffin. Do you recall your own religious practices when you were living in Chicago with Jack? Did your practices and feelings at that time differ from his?
Mr. Ruby. Well, I would say—can you make that a little more clear?
Mr. Griffin. Looking back to the time when you and Jack saw each other regularly when you were in Chicago, when Jack was in Chicago, were your religious practices the same as they are now? Were you any more religious then? Did you observe the holidays more closely?
Mr. Ruby. You want to compare Jack with myself?
Mr. Griffin. First of all, let me ask you about your own practice.
Mr. Ruby. Well, you must understand, first, that it is very unusual for a Jewish boy not to be bar mitzvah.
Mr. Griffin. I am not asking about particular ceremonies, but I am asking you about the regular habits of weekly attendance and so forth. Did they differ in the period before 1948 from the way they are now?