Nearby Rhode Island and Delaware have beensimilarly ignored, since both Super Tuesday statesare expected to lean toward Tsongas.
Some candidates have made last minute plans,however. Brown scheduled a rally for downtownBoston Monday night, and Tsongas decided to returnhome during part of election day.
On the Republican side, Buchanan campaignedyesterday throughout the state. He stopped for aquick beer at a bar in Quincy with cheeringcustomers yelling "drink, drink, drink" and "Godbless America, God bless Pat."
Buchanan supporters also were involved in ashort scuffle at a rally in Warwick, R.I., wheremembers of the Coalition for Jewish Concernsstood for 10 minutes during Buchanan's speech toprotest what they said was his anti-Semitism.
Duke also campaigned in Massachusetts over theweekend, speaking to about 50 people in PlymouthSaturday night.
Saturday's South Carolina primaries set thestage for what could be an oft-repeated scenariotomorrow. Clinton dominated, as expected, winning64 percent of the vote. Tsongas followed with 18percent, and former Brown and Harkin each won sixpercent. Bush received 67 percent of theRepublican vote, while Buchanan won 26 percent andDuke won seven percent.
In Wyoming's Democratic caucuses, Clinton won28 percent of the delegates, with Brown at 24percent, Harkin at 14 percent and Tsongas at 11percent.
Clinton is expected to post similar results inmost of tomorrow's elections, which will takeplace in Southern states. But certainstates--especially lucrative Florida, whereTsongas spent most of Saturday--are still up forgrabs.
Much of yesterday's campaigning took place overthe airwaves. Several candidates liked theirSaturday wounds on the Sunday morning newsprograms, and Clinton took the brunt of theirattacks.
Clinton is "the candidate of the hacks, theinsiders, and the politicians that have gottenthis country into the mess that it's in," saidBrown on NBC's "Meet the Press."
And Tsongas, speaking on ABC, said he did notthink Clinton was electable.
Bush supporters, including Republican PartyChair Richard Bond, tried to rationalize thepopularity of insurgent candidate Buchanan.
Bond said the conservative columnist'scandidacy is "a good vehicle for people to getthis out of their system now, register theirmessage with the president, and come home to himin the fall."
Still, Buchanan vowed to stay in the race toAugust's GOP convention in Houston. On "Face theNation," he said his campaign "is about more thanpiling up delegates."
Yesterday, Clinton criss-crossed Texas, thebiggest Super Tuesday trophy of them all. Invisits to Black congregations in Houston andAustin, the candidate spoke of racial unity.
At a campaign stop in Austin, Clinton vowed,"If George Bush tries to play the race card, Iwill stick it to him."
Tsongas, too, addressed Black voters, visitinga church in Nashville and linking his survival ofcancer with a call for spirituality in politics.
After four days of campaigning in the South,Bush spent the day at Camp David, while Buchananstumped in Louisiana.
Written with dispatches from The AssociatedPress.