Sunday
Sketches

Sunday mornings in the
Detroit -Jewish community run
the gamut from relaxed
brunches to intense workouts.

LONNY GOLDSMITH Staff Writer

GLENN TRIEST Photographer

roit Nevis

S

unday morning routines are the kind most people
don't mind.
For some, it means working out. For others, it's
relaxing with family or friends over a leisurely
brunch, running out for bagels and coffee, poring over the
pages of the Sunday paper or going to Sunday school.
Whatever the case, most people are wearing smiles when
they do what they do. O

Above: Ben Saperstein and Jack Sherman, both of
Farmington Hills, canceled their subscriptions to The
Detroit News and Free Press during the strike. "I won't sub-
scribe to it, but I'll go pick it up," Sherman said on a recent
Sunday morning at Borders. "I come out eve?), Sunday to get
the papers."

Le : On their way to Sunday school, Seth and Evan Samuels
o West Bloomfield wait while their dad, Gary, pays for
b reakfast at New York Bagel in Bloomfield Hills. "We've
come here every Sunday morning for six or seven years,"
Gary said. "It's our family ritual. As soon as they are old
enough, they'll be the first in line for a job here.

2/13
1998

30

