8 Tuesday, February 7, 1989 / University Daily Kansan I MICROTECH COMPUTERS We offer the Powerful 10MHz XT Zero Wait State Technology - Fully IBM PC/XT > Compatible. - 10 MHz and 4.77MHz Clock Speeds - 8 Expansion Slot - 8 Expansion - 640k RAM - 640k RAM - 20 MB Hard Disk Drive - Monographics Adaptor - One Year Warrant - A Computer You Can Use Now, and Later. - Your choice of Amber or Green Monitors. $1087 Follow the price and service leader.. MICROTECH Computers 2329M Iowa 841-9513 The Hawk's Nest Bakery in The Kansas Union GHAZI ABAD, Afghanistan — Muslim guerrillas who captured the huge Ghazib Abad government farm smashed much of the city despite being forced to reconstruct it because it was made by the bated Soviets. Afghans smash Soviet equipment The Associated Press dotted the tree-lined roads of the farm 15 miles east of Jalalabad in eastern Afghanistan, along with hulks of Afghan army tanks and trucks. Charred remains of textbooks and farming manuals, the residue of guerrilla bonfires, littered roadside flower beds. outces, classrooms and residential buildings were damaged, machinery was burned, livestock were taken away, and milking machines and other modern equipment were smashed. mashed. Burned-out tractors and bulldozers A billboard advertising a film about modern farming methods still hung above the entrance of a movie theater that had been set afire. "We burned it because it showed Russian films," said one of the guerrillas who drove government forces out of Ghazi Abad last month. Scores of mujaheeden, the Islamic holy warriors who began fighting after a Communist coup 11 years ago, sat in the abandoned buildings in turbans or fur hats, brewing tea and talking. Others manned rocket launchers outside, sitting on small benches taken from classrooms. Some decorated their weapons with pink roses. Guerrilla commanders said every effort was being made to limit damage as their forces pushed back government troops, noting the value Last Soviet convoys leaving Kabul The Associated Press KABUL, Afghanistan — The last military convoys rolled north toward the border yesterday, Soviet officials said, more than a week before the deadline for the Red army to leave a frustrating war in which it lost more than 13,000 men. 13,000 men. A Soviet military spokesman said that less than 20,000 Soviet soldiers remained in Afghanistan and that they were moving toward the border yesterday. But in Kabul, hundreds of Soviet soldiers still guarded the airport, where military transports brought in food and fuel to ease shortages caused by a blockade of the capital by Muslim guerrillas who surrounded it. capital by muslims the Communist Party newspaper Prada said the last Soviet soldier left Kabul Sunday. Soviet officials in the Afghan capital, however, said that about Muslim guerrillas began fighting after a communist coup in April 1978, and Soviet soldiers began entering Afghanistan in December 1979, growing an estimated 35,000 fighters. The battle began May 15, 1988 under a U.N.-mediated agreement. Eduard A. Shevardnadze, the Soviet foreign minister, met with officials in neighboring Pakistan but did not find a way to end the 11-year-old civil war peacefully. He said Monday that the Soviets would continue supporting the Marxist government in Kabul but would not send troops back into the nation. under a 5-10-member Soviet diplomat said Monday all Red Army soldiers in Shindand, the last Soviet military complex in the country, left their garrison. 1,000 Red army troopers would remain at the airport until the end of next week. of modern complexes like Ghazi Abad in rebuilding. Some admitted it had been difficult to restrain their men and keep them from attacking anything associated with government and its Soviet sponsors. "We know there are mujadeden who only think about fighting," said Ahman Ehsan, a guerrilla guide. "We will need the future, that we will need this." Every effort would be made to avoid large attacks on cities in order to minimize civilian casualties, the commanders said. They said that the police had told to protect civilians and avoid causing damage whenever possible. Some guerrillas said they wrecked parts of Ghazi Abad because the buildings and equipment were made by the Soviets. "We don't want help from Russia, not even functioning farm equipment" Khalidhulua, a young commander who uses only one name Kitty Dukakis in rehab center He and other commanders said the government formed after the fall of the Marxist regime, which they predict is imminent, would look to Western nations for aid and equipment to help with the war. The United States has been the chief arms supplier to insurgents based in neighboring Pakistan. The Associated Press BOSTON - Kitty Dakikas, the wife of Gov. Michael Dakikas, is being treated for alcohol problems trigged by her husband's loss to George Bush in the 1988 presidential election, the governor said Monday. Kitty Dukakis was not known to be dependent on alcohol until the governor's statement, but she has had a history of addiction to diet pills. She entered a Minnesota treatment center in 1982, where, she said, she conquered her dependency. "As she has now discovered, whether it comes in a bottle or is solid, if you are chemically dependent, you are chemically dependent," Dukakis said. He said that since the presidential campaign Kitty Dukakis, 52, used alcohol "in excessive quantities" in a number of occasions at while home. "Until shortly after Election Day on Nov. 8, Kitty had never had a problem with alcohol," Dukakis said in a statement. "It is a disease from which you never recover; you're always recovering." he said, calling her alcohol problem another manifestation of her underlying chemical dependency. He said that he and their children supported her choice. She won praise for her candor and Dukakis, who does not smoke and rarely drinks, said his wife had entered the Edgehill facility on Sunday. On Sunday and would stay there about a month. "She recognizes it," Dukakis said. "It was her decision to go into treatment." Kitty Dukakis said in July 1987, early in her husband's presidential campaign, that she had recovered five years earlier from a 26-year addiction to mild amphibetamines she began as a teenager to she begin her weight. "We know how loved and respected she is both here in the commonwealth and across the nation, and she is grateful for the love and support she has received from so many good and decent people," Dukakis said. became an active campaigner, often appearing as a surrogate for Dukakis. Dorsey said the problem, which he refused to characterize as alcoholism, flared up in the three months since the election and did not involve a renewed use of drugs other than alcohol. Kitty Dukakis' problem was caused by "a combination of physical exhaustion, the stress of the campaign effort and the post-election lewdown," the governor said. The couple was at home in suburban Brookline during the weekend, and there was no specific incident or accident that prompted the decision to seek treatment, according to Dukakis spokesman James Dorsey. No category for big cookie The Associated Press ALLENTOWN, Pa. — As gingerbread men go, the one at Kinsley's Market in nearby Brodheadsville is very big. But at 12 feet tall, it's not big enough for the Guinness Book of World Records. And if it were big enough, it still wouldn't make the book because Guinness doesn't have a category for gingerbread men. "is usappointing to us," said Kathy Lockwitch, assistant manager at Kinsley's bakery. "If we would have known, we would have attempted something else or we wouldn't have bothered." Lockwitch said bakey manager Jerry Laso called Guinness before he and Lockwitch made the giant cookie. She says she was told that he would consider their dish after they had made their gingerbread man. DUDS'nSUDS LADIES' NIGHT Come Join the Fun! Wednesdays, Ladies receive a FREE wash (75¢ value) between 6-10:30 p.m. Special Drink Prices for ALL: Soft Drinks Beer 50¢ 50¢ DUDS'nSUDS Hours: Daily 7 a.m. Good clean sun! Last Load at 10:30 p.m. 918 Mississippi 841-8833 Here's how it works: Send Someone Special A Message From the Heart Your Valentine's personal message published in the Kansan Come to the Kansan office at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Place and pay for your ad. Order now and we'll send a note to your Valentine telling him or her to look for your message on the 14th. It's that easy! One-inch ads only $6. Two-inch ads only $10. All messages arranged alphabetically Choose the design you want. Design A Debbie, I love you! Steve Design C Mike, I can't wait for the party this weekend, it will be a blast! Amy Dear John, I hope our first Valentine's Day together is as special as our first date. Love, Sue I Love You Design D Design B D.A B- These designs available in two inches only: Design E Design F Thanks for all the support you've given me this past year! I love you! G.M. we've gone through so much over the past two years! During that time I have learned and grown so much... You've been my inspiration through it all! Here's to our future together! Rachel, Will you go out with me? Saturday night on the plaza...I'll bring the champagne and roses! Danny THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN