Eating and Drinking
By day at least, there's little to keep you in the Ville Nouvelle , the new city established by Lyautey at the beginning of the Protectorate. Unlike Casa or Rabat, where the French adapted Moroccan forms to create their own showplaces, this is a pretty lacklustre European grid. The Ville Nouvelle is, however, home to most of the faculties of the city's university, and is very much the city's business and commercial centre. If you want to talk with Fassis on a basis other than that of guide to tourist, you'll stand the most chance in the cafes here, and it's more likely that the students you meet are exactly that. The quarter is also the © 2003 by Rough Guides Ltd. as trustee for its Authors. Published by Rough Guides. All rights reserved. Rough Guides name is a trademark of Rough Guides Ltd. Buy the book here!
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centre for most of the city's restaurants, cafes, bars, bookshops and other facilities. Fes El Bali and Fes El Djedid are quieter at night, except during Ramadan (when shops and stalls stay open till two or three in the morning). They have, as with all Medina quarters throughout Morocco, no bars, and with the exception of a few "Palace-Restaurants", many of which are open for lunch only and cater mainly for tour groups, their eating places are on the basic side.
Your Tips For Fes (Fez)
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