/Ling BAVARIA page 73 U eIn itS . 1204 S. Woodward, Royal Oak (Just North of 696) would want Jewish cuisine, and they would want a Jewish gath- ering place, too." Cafe Pinokothek, indeed, be- came a popular place for Jewish artists, actors and others. One regular, a filmmaker, even used the cafe as a setting for a film he was shooting. When the Cohens outgrew the small quarters of their first site, they moved to another site near the center of Munich, and then to a location in Schwabing, the pop- ular student quarter, before set- tling in the present quarters on Theresienstrasse, a street just off the centrally located Lud- wigstrasse. The restaurant is located in a quiet courtyard. Here patrons gather to socialize and enjoy the home-cooked specialities that are still made from Marjem Cohens's original recipes. Now they are prepared by daughter-in-law Annette Shapiro, while Jacques and Yocheved Cohen manage the restaurant. 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Twice each month, the members of the local Mac- cabea, the Jewish sports club, hold their board meetings here. The restaurant gets its share of visiting Israelis, too: The fam- ily has close ties to Israel, and Maon is well known there. Whether tourists or locals, pa- trons enjoy the camaraderie as well as the cuisine. Recently, Maon won a glowing review from a food critic for Abendzeitung, Munich's evening newspaper. "The food is well prepared and this is a very sociable family restaurant," he wrote. "Our door is open to Jews and non-Jews," said Kurt Cohen, who clearly relishes his role as unof- ficial host. "This is a place where everybody can come and relax and feel at home." ❑ New York Doings Indoors And Out ROSE KLEINER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS N ew York's vibrant arts scene beckons in the lazy summer days, as much as in the other seasons. The tempting array of plays, concerts, exhibits and other attractions has an added dimension in the sum- mer, when some of the arts move outdoors. Singles and families will find many interesting activ- ities, an excellent selection of kosher restaurants, and many opportunities to meet new peo- ple. Singles, especially, should con- tact the 92nd St. Y, the Sutton Place Synagogue, the Lincoln Square Synagogue, and various other institutions where all sorts of programs and activities for sin- gles continue throughout the summer. For theater on Broadway, Jackie mason (Politically Incor- rect) is drawing large crowds with his one-man show, as is Neil Si- mon's comedy, Laughter on the 23rd Floor. Off-Broadway, Sher- ry Glaser's Family Secrets is an award-winning show about three generations of a Jewish family; and That's Life, at the Jewish Repertory Theater, is a musical look at contemporary Jewish life through comic vignettes. The city resounds with music in summer, indoors and out. The Mostly Mozart Festival, at Lin- coln Center's Avery Fisher Hall, is classical music festival. It con- tinues through August. Musi- cians Itzhak Perlman, Shlomo Mintz and Andre Watts are on the program. Avery Fisher Hall will also host a concert by the Canadian Brass in August. Through Aug. 13, one can en- joy free outdoor concerts by the New York Philharmonic at the city's various parks. During August, Lincoln Cen- ter has scheduled daily free pro- grams of all sorts of music, and performances, in several of its plazas. A Just for Kids program at the Fountain Plaza features homemade instruments and mu- sic from Montreal. Playday, on Aug. 13, is planned as a family fun day with music, dancing, workshops, puppets, etc. On Aug. 26, the Boston Tea Party, at Lincoln Center, will pre- sent music from the ethnic tra- ditions and communities of Boston. Included in the program will be a selection of klezmer mu- sic. The Jewish Museum has an exhibit on Jewish summer camp- ing, "A Worthy Use of Summer," exploring how summer camps have preserved Jewish identity. Another exhibit at this museum, "The Best Day of the Week," is aimed at children and examines some of the rituals used for cel- ebrating the Sabbath. Treasures from Dubrovnik, at the Yeshiva University Museum, is a display ofJudaica, including a 13th-century Torah scroll, from