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The two GOP rivals for a Florida Senate seat, Charlie Crist and Marco Rubio, both urged their supporters to get involved in Brown's campaign. The Coakley and Brown campaigns also were bombarding supporters with automated phone calls. The Democrats used appeals from Clinton and Obama, while Republicans have relied on calls from Brown himself and beloved Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling. Concern among Democrats about turnout has been palpable. At a largely black church service Sunday, Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino implored congregants to call at least 10 friends and make sure they planned to vote Tuesday. At a Coakley rally in Hyannis Sunday, state Senate President Therese Murray went the high-tech route. "We need you on Facebook, on YouTube, on e-mail, texting ... however you communicate," she said, encouraging supporters to use those tools as a way to get their friends to show up at the polls. Snowfall could be a concern: The National Weather Service said up to 8 inches will fall in parts of the state by midday Monday. Massachusetts Secretary of State William Galvin said late Sunday that he was working with the state's Emergency Management Agency to ensure voters have access to all polling places Tuesday. Coakley and Brown were expected to start their last day of the campaign together, at a breakfast honoring the late Rev. Martin Luther King on the national holiday commemorating the civil rights leader's birthday. Coakley was then headed to campaign events in western Massachusetts, while Brown planned to wrap up with a rally in his hometown of Wrentham.
[Associated
Press;
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