The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, May 12, 1982-Page 11 Adventurer leads exotic life A BOARD THE PLUS ULTRA (AP) - He's battled pirates n the high seas, and awaited execution before a communist firing squad. For everyone's fantasy of exotic adventures, Bob Moran hasa true-life story. He's soared through the air in a twin-engine plane and zoomed around racetracks in sportscars. Now, at the age of 53, he heads a large team of divers and treasure hunters minutely scouring the bottom of the Forida Straits for the remains of the Santa Margarita and the Nuestra Senora de Atocha. THE TWO SHIPS, headed for Spain with their hulls stuffed with gold and silver, went to the bottom of the sea when a hurricane struck in September, 1622. "He's driven to find that treasure,' says Bruce Et- shman, diver-crewman on Moran's 47-foot twin- engine diesel yacht, which serves as seaborne operational headquarters for Treasure Salvors, a company formed by Key West treasure hunter Mel Fisher. Everyone should experience venture. I recommend it everyone, even if they are milktoast type. ' ad- for the -Bob Moran treasure hunter Moran, who has known Fisher for 16 years, is mainly responsible for salvaging over $40 million worth of gold, silver, jewels and artifacts from the. two sunken ships since this particular search began 12 years ago. HIS LIFESTYLE - which included haivng his own SWAT team to recover hijacked yachts from modern day pirates - has cost him a marriage. And although he misses his two children, he says he doesn't miss a "normal" life. - "Too many people are wrapped up with making a living," he says. "Everyone should experience ad- venture. I recommend it for everyone, even if they are the milktoast type." Moran joined the Navy when he was 17, traveling the world for nearly a decade. During those years, he became an aerial photographer and scuba diver. He, also raced motorcycles and sportscars. AFTER THE NAVY, he studied business ad- ministration at the University of Buffalo. But he became "impatient and bored." Moran eventually became part-owner of a salvage vessel. He and a crew of eight were taking it to the, Dominican Republic in December, 1962, when a violent storm sank the boat in the Atlantic Ocean. "The nine of us drifted four days and five nights," Moran said. Their lifeboat landed on the northern coast of Cuba near a Soviet-built missile site. 'Abby' admits repeating column letters BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)- Abigail Van Buren admitted reusing letters in her advice column without labeling them as repeats, but said yesterday she will make sure they are identified properly from now on. The practice came under fire after her twin sister and fellow advice columnist Ann Landers admitted she had reused letters from 15 years ago without telling readers they were repeats. When Van Buren was first questioned about the practice, her secretary denied the columnist ever reused letters without identifying them as repeats. HOWEVER, IN a statement released by Fairway, Kansas-based Universal Press Syndicate, distributors of "Dear Abby," Van Buren said her Mother's Day column on Sunday contained two old letters that were not labeled as repeats. The letters praised an unwed mother for putting her child up for adoption and inquired about the significance of a single carnation on Mother's Day. One of the letters had been used previously on May 12, 1979, and the other on May 7, 1977, according to a check by the Cherokee Iowa Daily Times. Yesterday's statement was issued af- ter Universal Press executives talked to Miss Van Buren on Monday night. They had been contacted by Daily Times officials, who told them the newspaper was going to run an article about the duplication, syndicate spokesman Ted Findlay said. UNIVERSAL Press drew a distinction between the practices of Miss Van Buren and Miss Landers. "Abby reprinted letters at the request of readers. This is different than the Ann Landers situation," Fin- dlay said ina prepared statement. "We endorse and support Dear Ab- by's decision to label every reprint regardless of how many times Abby has used the item in the past," tle syn- dicate said. .. _., Corporate tyke AP Photo Dino Konstantino, a three-year-old from Ohio, runs the family hot dog cart in downtown Cleveland, undoubtedly anticip- ating his first million in profits. Nation's airlines stage bidding warin effort to f 1 t seats NEW YORK (AP)- Bidding to fill empty seats, the nation's airlines are cutting fares for children-in some cases eliminating fares outright-to promote summer vacation by air. Pricing departments of airlines scurried to keep up with the com- petition yesterday, as the industry ap- proached its peak season. BRANIFF International announced a "school's out sale" in nationwide newspaper ads, offering 50 percent discounts for children between ages 2 and 11, accompanied by an adult, and a 25 percent discount for young people between 8 and 21, escorted or not, good for anywhere Braniff flies. American Airlines immediately said it would match the discounts on routes where it and Braniff compete.. Generally, airlines allow children under 2 to fly free as long as they are held in an adult's lap. The standard fare for children over 2 ranges between two- thirds and three-fourths of the adult fare. PAN AMERICAN World Airways an- nounced a "free kids" promotion, when the children are accompanied by adults, on its north-south routes bet- ween New York, Washington and Florida, and in the Los Angeles- Honolulu market. On East Coast runs, Pan Am was un- dercutting Eastern Airlines and Delta Air Lines. Both Eastern and Delta had been promoting a round-trip youth fare of $49, slashed from a standard round- trip youth fare of $262., Trans World Airlines and United Airlines were pondering whether they would match the competition, spokesmen said. ALL AGREED that keeping up with rapidly changing fares and conditions was harrowing. "It's impossible, it' really is," lamented Delta's William Berry. For the first three months of the year, the 12 major carriers reported com- bined net losses of more than $500 million. Only USAir, among major airlines, reported a net profit for the quarter, $10.8 million. In the same period, about 40 percent of available airline seats were flying empty. The airlines attribute their losses to the recession that has cut into air travel and to decreased revenue