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Stumped:Candidates Go the Distance

Darling says he thought the bill the council finally did pass--which pledged support for Harvard students in ROTC--had been a compromise. After Darling and Patel left, the BGLTSA members disagreed.

8 p.m.

While Tenney canvasses Weld, her running mate takes up the soapbox in Thayer. Over the course of two-and-a-half hours, Leonard pushes his ticket. But he spends almost as much time explaining what the council is and how it works.

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"You're trying to get a message across to people who don't know anything about the race," he says of campaigning among first-years. "They don't know anything about the U.C."

Leonard coughs loudly between doors and seems fatigued, though remained composed during the visits.

"I don't see how you, if you aren't as determined as I am, how you can go through this," he says.

--Tonisha M. Calbert, Sarah A. Dolgonos, Zachary R. Heineman, Andrew S. Holbrook, Zachary R. Mider, Daniel P. Mosteller and David C. Newman contributed to the reporting of this article.

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