Mr. Griffin. Some homes keep separate dishes for meat and dairy products.

Mr. Ruby. Yes; we had separate dishes until my mother passed away.

Mr. Griffin. How about the regularity of attending church services, temple services, did you go every week to temple services?

Mr. Ruby. No, no; not all of us. I know I didn’t. My sisters did. My sister did.

Mr. Griffin. Which sister?

Mr. Ruby. Marion. My father did until he became ill, you know, and then he passed away.

Mr. Griffin. Was there any resentment in the home toward the practices that were maintained by your parents there, failure to converse regularly in English and perhaps their old world habits?

Mr. Ruby. I don’t understand.

Mr. Griffin. Which is common in all families, I think, in which the practices that are observed in the home are not the kind of practices that you see on television or in the movies. Was there resentment among any of the children toward the fact that here was a home in which a foreign language was spoken, and practices were observed which did not appear to be the same practices as the people who were on top in American society?

Mr. Ruby. Yes; I would say so. However, my mother insisted that we follow the lines of the Orthodox Jew.