SMOKE POURS FROM the Dutch luxury liner "Prinsendam," which caught fire in the Gulf of Alaska yesterday forcing all 510 people aboard to abandon ship in rough seas. Ship fire sends 500 into rafts INTERNSHIPS WASHINGTON, D.C.-LANSING, MI. Interested in working in Washington, D.C., or Lans- ing, Michigan, during summer, 1981?-Come fine out how at the University of Michigan's Public Service Intern Program Mass Meeting. Summer internships are available in legislative offices, executive offices and agencies, the judiciary, lobbying organizations, and the media. Financial assistance available. ORGANIZATIONAL MASS MEETING ACKHAM AUD. WEDNESDAY UNDERGRADUATES OCTOBER 8 AONLY 7:00 PM.' (Continued from Page 1) Shorthy after 5 a.m. PDT, a message from the ship said "the fire has spread from the engine room to the dining room," Massey said. At 6:15 a.m. the call was sounded to abandon ship, and more than 400 people were lowered into lifeboats about 12 miles west of Glacier Bay National *Ficre at~ home for re tarrid kills3 Monument, Massey skid. Massey said loss of water pressure because of the fire left the luxury liner without firefighting capacity. Coast Guard rescue craft brought firefighting equipment, he said. ALERTED AT the time of the first' SOS, the Williamsburgh detoured from its voyage from Valdez, Alaska, to Texas and arrived on the scene to begin taking aboard passengers and crew members about three hours after the lifeboats were lowered shortly after 6 a.m. PDT. When the rescue is completed, the Coast Guard said the Williamsburgh,. captained by Arthur Fertig, would take the survivors to Valdez, Alaska, the southern terminus of the 800-mile tran- sAlaska pipeline. "I TALKED to some of the passengers a little while ago and they seem to be typical survivors," said radio officer Jim Pfister of the Williamsburgh in a ship-to-shore inter- view. "They seem to be very nervous. They woke in the middle of the night with ex- plosions and smoke in the, hallways. They didn't know what was really going on until they had to abandontship." RA j f NAPERVILLE, Ill. (AP)-A fire swept a third-floor lounge and hallway area in a home for retarded adults early yesterday, killing three male residents, fire officials said. The blaze in the Little Friends Com- munity Living Facility was spotted around 2 a.m., Fire Chief Arnold Hodel. said, and was extinguished 15 minutes after firefighters arrived. THE VICTIMS, whose names were withheld pending the notification of their families, died of smoke inhalation, a spokesman at Edward Hospital said. One victim, who apparently was trying to escape the blaze, was found in the hallway, while the other two victims were found in a bedroom near the lounge, authorities reported. Fire officials said they have not determined the cause of the fire. A recent inspection by the state fire mar- shal's office turned up minor fire code violations, but "there was nothing major or we wouldn't be open," said Jack Ryan, executive director. Public Service Intern Roam ' Welcome To S CHECK ATE The Discount Top Shop Shirts * Blouses * Sweaters " Velours-For Less AndNow.. . Blazers * Skirts * Pants * Jeans All at Moneysaving Prices SHANA ALEXANDER JAMES J. KILPATRICK Beautiful Things For Campus and Career COME SEE! COME SAVE! Fashion For Less a 'p"?j A I { 5 s f x +y 1 ., d 14 U