Mended runners lead eindermen in CCC's By DAVE RENBARGER A pair of once hobbled Wolverine distance men combined to give Michigan 14 first-day points and put the team in fifth place heading into this af- ternoon's conclusion of the Central Collegiate Conference Outdoor Track and Field Championships. MIKE McGUIRE, on the shelf for more than a year with mononucleosis, turned in a 34:42.8 in the 10,000 meter run to grab second place. Teammate Dan Heikkinen, idled by a stress frac- ture last fall, finished third in the 3,000 meter steeplechase with a personal best of 8:55.91. Western Michigan jumped out to the early lead with 39 points. Only 6 of 21 events were decided yesterday, as the 377 athletes representing 22 schools competed for berths in today's finals. The hosting Wolverines are low- keying this meet all the way, as coach Jack Harvey has elected to save his best runners for next week's NCAA Championships in Eugene, Ore. Nonetheless, the Blue thinclads placed 12 qualifiers into today's finals. "I didn't expect anybody to be fired up," said Harvey, who only bothered to enter in two of yesterday's six finals. "Overall I'd have to say things went pretty well." McGuire, running his first 10,000 in three years, stayed with eventual win- ner Dave McDonald of Pitt through the first four and a half miles of the six mile-plus race before falling back, "I THINK THAT there's still some hope for me," said the junior who won All-American cross country honors in 1975. "People have been writing me off for so long now that even I was begin- ning to believe them."- Heikkinen has also been running well of late, after sitting out the entire cross country campaign. In knocking off more than six seconds from his previous best steeple, Heikkinen's only complaint was that he "took the last water jump with my right foot instead of my left. That kind of messed me up." While McGuire and Heikkinen are continuing their comebacks, another familiar Wolverine began one yester- day. Harlan Huckleby who ran on a Big Ten champion mile relay team as a freshman, returned to the track yester- day to run in his first race in over two years. Huck, normally a quarter-miler, didn't break any records, as he finished sixth out of six in the 100 meters with a time of :11.24. He was not disappointed however. "I GOT STARTED pretty good, but I lost it after 50 yards," said Huckleby, who begain training only three weeks ago. "I haven't developed what sprin- ters call 'fifth gear' yet. I've got a long way to go.' Ho's tailback left Harvey's squad just before the 1977 season, preferring to concentrate on one sport. Now, he says that running track will help get his in- jured left hamstring back into shape. "The hardest part of it all is that I've got to accept the fact that I'm gonna get beat by guys I used to walk on for awhile." Daily Photo MICHIIGAN'S CHIARLES CROUTIIER reflect, a look of relief yesterday after posting the faste.st qualifying time in the 400 meter ron at the Central Collegiate Conference track championships being held at Ferry Field. Croother'. time of 48.87 pots him into today's final. 111i sports o the DAILY Who has Joe? ByhA TORONTO-Charlie Finley can't seem to make up his mind about Joe Coleman. The Oakland A's owner let Coleman, his veteran lbelief ace, go to the Toronto Blue Jays recently for the $10,000 waiver price after the pitcher ser- ved up a home run ball to Lamar Johnson of Chicago White Sox. Now, says Toronto President Peter Bavasi, Finley wants his pitcher back and is willirng to pay the Jays double what he cost them. Bavasi, of course, figures there's something fishy in Chicago, from where Finley inns his baseball operation. Bavasi isn't kidding himself that the A's want to keep Coleman, even though the pitcher was the club's most effective bullpen hurler before Finley blew his top. "Somewhere there's a smoking gun," says Bavasi, "and we're going to find out where it is. "Here's what we gueas has happened. There's a club that would have liven Charlie a lot more than we gave him for Coleman. It probably was prepared to give upsa player whom Charlie would like to have ... "What we have to do is find out which club it is. Meanwhile, we play along with Charlie. I'm going to keep Joe informed of what's going on. W~e have to consider his feelings in this thing, too." Homers doom Detroit BOSTON (AP)-Dwight Evans hit two home runs and Jim Rice slammed a two-run shot last night, powering the Boston Red Sox to a 6-3 victory over the Detroit Tigers. Rice staked left-bander Bill Lee, -1, to a 2-0 lead by drilling his 16th homer-and his 11th this month-into the right field stands off Detroit star- ter Milt Wilcox, 3-2, in the first inning. Detroit's Rusty Staub. hit his fifth homer with the bases empty in the fourth inning and, after Evans hit a solo in the fifth, the Tigers pulled into a 3- 3 tie an inning later on a double by Staub and Jason Thompson's i2th homer into the screen in left-center, The Red Sox quickly regained the lead in their half of the sixth. Jack Brohamer got a bloop double, Evans walked and Fred Kendall heat out a in- fle 'h'it filling thbabes,. Rick Burle~op blooped a, single, to. shallow left- nt- 1ing BrohamtT- Evans sor f, p e -= ss: What d'lya say there, Watson ol' boy? Think you could sell a few Daily subscrip- tions during freshman orientation? The pay is good... $3.65'/hour. You can work full or part time. And with your . .. um . .. winning per- sonality, it should be a breeze. What d'ya say, Watson? Give 'em a ring at the Daily, 764-0560 WORK/STUDY ONLY