Okay, taking a look at the Penn State results--curiously spotty, given that three top-25 teams were billed as going to be competing, but that's the nature of these season's (or semester's) openers.
The women's results appear first, and it seems obvious that for the Big Red this was intended as a "working" meet, with much much doubling. No big news in the short sprints, but Ebolutalese ran the 400 in 55.81 (.18sec faster than last year's Heps-winning time on Cornell's flat track).
The real Cornell story has to be steeplechaser Rachel Sorna, who doubled 4:47 for the mile and 9:18 for the 3,000--the latter, I believe, a school record by several seconds, and faster than last year's winning time at Heps. This woman was already a multiple Heps medalist, but she has stepped up an entire level this year. Extremely impressive.
Otherwise, CU had several good marks/places (including some field marks and 3:47 in an all-doublers 4x400), but nothing extraordinary. Despite the talk of a full squad for this meet, there were several notable absentees.
For the Cornell men, more of the same: good competitive efforts and a fair amount of doubling, with some no-shows and only a few exceptional marks. One of those marks came from Bryan Rhodes, who threw a big 18.62 (61ft and a bit) in the weight and broke the school's venerable freshman record that dated to 1977. And Stephen Mozia, who won the shot at 59ft, threw nearly the same distance (5cm shorter) in the weight.
Steven Bell won the LJ with a big 7.35m/24-1.5 (and also TJed 14.06), and the Big Red had two men (Montez Blair and freshman Stephen Afadapa) over 7-1 in the HJ, with Blair the winner. CU had little presence in the longer races but had two men under 1:20 in the 600.