For Florida's sole remaining sex surrogate, love is a many splintered thing.
It's not just giant companies cashing in on America's defense industry.
How a throwaway idea at the Barkley ad agency became the "Sonic Guys."
A diner's guide to Texas's oldest Mexican restaurants.
We can't know for certain because Dowling, who has aided the Guthrie immeasurably through his willingness to talk to any group, anywhere, anytime, declined to discuss his political donations. While not speaking directly to Dowling's situation, however, Sheila Smith, executive director of the lobbying group Minnesota Citizens for the Arts, offers a certain rationale. "If you want to accomplish anything at the legislature," Smith explains, "the goal is to have as many supporters of your issue as possible. And in our society today, we're so divided that if you want to accomplish anything at all, you need to make friends on both sides of the aisle."
Those who enjoy the comedy of our state legislature will recall that last year the Guthrie received a $25 million state subsidy for the building of a $125 million theater complex on the Mississippi riverfront. It's nearly impossible to fathom this project having succeeded without the advocacy of the Guthrie's leader. This is truly the House that Joe Built.
Dowling's personal politicking, then, would seem a natural extension of the theater's $150,905 lobbying effort in the 2002-2003 fiscal year. (Dowling is said to have made numerous smaller donations to statewide candidates. Records also show a $250 gift to Democratic Congressman Martin Sabo, a $500 gift to the last living giant of the old-guard DFL, Walter Mondale, and $500 to a DNC presidential fundraising committee.)
Smith speaks at length about "civic engagement" and the "nonpartisan" status of the arts. Yet philistines may wonder how this kind of strategic giving differs from the "participation" practiced by corporate giants like Cargill or IBM. "The lobbying we are doing is on behalf of artists and arts and nonprofits in Minnesota," Smith says. "And nonprofits are owned by the public. So, unlike IBM, we're not lobbying for a company and for ourselves. We're lobbying for the people of Minnesota."
Though Dowling prefers to lobby from backstage, he did deliver a dramatic final act to this election mystery. On June 30 of this year, Dowling's representative called back to say, the director wrote out another check for $2,000...to the campaign of John F. Kerry.