Note: preliminary results carried over in the field events; this affected the outcome of the long jump, triple jump, and shot put. Hermann Spegel of UCLA won the javelin at 233-10.5, while Stanford's Bob Stoecker won the discus in 183-10.5.
Oregon's Neal Steinhauer won the shot put; as noted above, his longest distance was in preliminaries and he beat his old field record of 60-2 with his 61-6.
Wellesley Clayton of USC won the long jump over Washington's Phil Shinnick, 25-4.5 to 24-9.5, while USC's Mahoney Samuels won a tightly contested triple jump. Mahoney won with a 49-3 preliminary round leap, just past Washington State's duo of Kent Swenson (49-.25) and Joe Wiggs (48-10).
Cal's sprint relay team won in 40.9 at the 440y distance, while Dick Hickman won the 100y at home in 9.6, with Oregon's Dave Blunt 2nd in the same time. Hickman tied the meet record held jointly by UCLA's Arnold Tripp (1962), Stanford's Larry Questad (1963), and USC's Dick Cortese (1963).
USC's Theo Viltz won the high hurdles in 14.1.
Finishing 4th in 14.3 was none other than future USATF president and track and cross country maven from Washington, Bill Roe.
Names that remain well-known in track circles to this day populate the mid-distance events. Bob Day (UCLA) won the mile in 4:03.0, just edging Stanford's Dave Deubner (4:03.2). Morgan Groth (OSU) won the 880y in 1:47.5, with Oregon's Wade Bell 2nd in 1:48.0; Groth's time was a meet and field record.
Ken Moore (OR) won the steeplechase in 9:05.1, with teammate Bruce Mortenson 2nd in 9:15.2. Notable in 5th was future 1968 Olympian Tracy Smith of Oregon State in 9:31.7.