The sun beams down on Algiers -- but the inhabitants do not smile back. It is a surly city, harrowed by the stresses of over-population and under-employment; with the architecture of Cannes, but the atmosphere of Aberdeen. During the day the cafes are thronged with all-male, typically Arab society. At night the city, responsive to President Boumedienne's own personal brand of puritanism, closes down like wartime Toronto on a Sunday.