T h n desd uar Wicig .' .. .y~b~ 1 20S* V w V U V " v w 0 w Wednesday, February 11, 2009 - The Michigan Daily QUOTES OF THE WEEK 4I' -- ABOUT CAMPUS LLUSTRAT ONS BY JOHN 00U ST We exchanged a some- what lengthy kiss ... it was, again, a romantic kiss." - BEAU BREEDLOVE, a 19-year-old former mayoral intern from Portland, Ore., describing one of his underage sexual encounters with Sam Adams, the city's publicly gay mayor, in a men's bathroom at City Hall. Adams has admitted the affair but said they waited to have sex until Breedlove turned 18. "The Khomeini fatwah was pronounced on Valentine's Day, 20 years ago, so that would be the worst." - SALMAN RUSHDIE when asked by a New York Magazine reporter if he had any bad Valentine's stories. Rushdie went into hiding for nearly a decade after the Ayatollah of Iran issued a fatwa ordering his assassination in response to his novel "The Satanic Verses". Rent-by-the-hour romance Testing the waters at the Oasis Hot Tub Gardens I've always been a little suspi- cious of the Oasis Hot Tub Gardens on State Street. And to be sure, I'm not alone. "I used to work at a pool, and you can only get things so clean," my roommate.said when I told her of my plan to visit the Oasis. For many, including myself, the idea of a rent-by-the-hour hot tub room is questionable. It has a cer- tain Las Vegas quality: what hap- pens in the hot tub stays in the hot tub - perhaps at the expense of the next person to use the hot tub. But admittedly, my qualms about the Oasis aren't founded on anything concrete. What do I know about the world of rental jets and rainforest rooms? I've never been squeamish of hotel mattress- es or bowling shoes - is a well- used Jacuzzi any different? To find out, I put my prejudices to the test and went with my boyfriend for a romantic night at the Oasis. I checked online first to fig- ure out the best time to go. For two people, the cheapest rate - $29 per hour - is offered before 4 p.m. An evening hour goes for $36 Sunday through Thursday and $44 on weekend nights. On the website, I scoped out all 16 of the theme rooms available: "Japan" with its oriental pago- da, "Vancouver" complete with totem pole and rustic fireplace and "Bali" featuring a painted seascape mural. One tab over from "garden photos" is another labeled "water purity," which attests in detail to the cleanliness of the Oasis hot tubs. But it wasn't exactly assur- ing tobe so assured. Would a res- taurant advertise that its kitchen is sanitary? Or a hotel that the sheets are washed? Of course, those paragraphs describing the "state-of-the-art disinfectant and filtration sys- tems" are exactly for the benefit of skeptics like myself. And actually, the water at Oasis does go through much more than the Band-Aid- ridden public pools of youth must have. The water in each hot tub is completely filtered out every eight minutes and each tub is drained and hand scrubbed almost daily, Oasis manager Faith Frazine said. "We know if people are con- cerned about the cleanliness of their waters, then they probably won't be repeat customers," Fra- zine said. Before I talked with Frazine and had my cleanliness concerns entirely put to rest, I gathered my own impression of the Oasis. I'm happy to report that the gardens did not seem the least bit unhy- gienic, though it was still quite an experience. Oasis stays open until at least 1 a.m. every night, so my boyfriend and I chose to try our luck with a walk-in appointment last Sunday at 11 p.m. After parking our car, we passed another, grad-student type couple who must have just emerged from their own love tub. The woman - her short hair still dripping wet - seemed to shoot me a knowing smile. Entering the building, we were immediately greeted by the strong smell of chlorine and aromatic spa packets, as well as two smiling women in bright floral shirts. The employee who checked us in acquainted us with the rules - no food, no bubble bath or oils and, first and foremost, no alcohol. That last one, which was posted on several walls, caught my atten- tion. Was it to keep customers from profaning the gardens with drunken debauchery? Were the owners of Oasis enterprising pro- hibitionists? No. As it turns out, it's because alcohol raises body temperature, and for a company that deals in 100-degree water, the liability of a customer putting a few back and passing out face down in the Casablanca tub is too high. "One beer is like 15 beers," Fra- zine said. "It's not safe." After declining to purchase a bottle of St. Julien non-alcoholic wine, my boyfriend and I were led to the Borneo Rainforest room - an open-ceiling space with the gardens' largest hot tub, capable of holding up to 10 people. The woman guiding us men- tioned that the room was often used for children's birthday par- ties, but the thought struck me that it might be the setting of very different, very adult kind of par- ties. But I pushed this thought from my mind. The soft music flowing from the changing room radio (set to the "piano and guitar" station) didn't suggest "porno" so much as "Mom and Dad's special date". Through a door we found our private paradise, which consisted of a large hot tub, a plastic palm tree and a stone waterfall that had been temporarily put out of com- mission during the last few weeks of extreme cold. The space didn't really exude Borneo - in the rainforest, I know, waterfalls don't freeze over - but with the rising steam lit by the glow of alternating neon lights, it was sort of like a dream sequence in some Univision soap opera. It was sexy in its way, not that I'd recommend having sex. Being mutually averse to pay-by-the- hour sex locations, my boyfriend and I didn't try. But if we had wanted to get the most bang for our buck, it might have been dif- ficult. The eye-watering chemical vapors and high water tempera- ture discourage rapid movement. Most visitors to the Borneo room likely do what we did: stare at the moon and enjoy the contrast between the chilly air and steam- ing water. Frazine said that Oasis is busiest in the winter for just that reason. She also said customers corpe in droves to use the outdoor tubs when it's raining, and that they're even safe during a thun- derstorm - a prospect that might entice me to come back. So in the end, I believe I've over- come any reservations I had about the Oasis Hot Tub Gardens. The 25-year-old company is what is has always been: a sort of classy, sort of cheesy escape just a few miles from campus. -JESSICA VOSGERCHIAN TALKING POINTS Three things you can talk about this week: 1. Geithner's stimulus plan 2. Sunken treasure ships 3. Radical anti-whaling activists And three things you can't: 1. Job cuts 2. CNN's inaugural T-shirts 3. The pilot of Flight 1549 O "You know it happens behind closed doors, obviously." - PHYLLIS SHEPARD, a woman from Cape Coral, Fla., who witnessed a man making out with a blowup female sex doll in the middle of a grocery store parking lot. George Bartusek, 51 years old, was apparently groping the dolls outside his car as people walked by him. He was soon arrested. YOUTUBE VIDEO OF THE WEEK Clammy Sosa is mad For years, mascots have merely ran around stadiums, flailing their arms and attempting to pump up crowds. They're no more than glorified cheer- leaders with funny costumes. Buts watchtout, sports fans, The mascots arc taking the games into their own hands. Across the nation, innocent coach- es and players have been accosted by a group of seemingly friendly mas- cots called the ZOOperstars. The most dangerous of these - Clammy Sosa - is an 8-foot-6 clam dressed to resemble baseball slugger Sammy Sosa. And Clammy has an appetite for destruction. According to the official Clammy Sosa website, he "slurps up and swal- lows everything in sight." The giant clam backs up, sprints toward its prey, pounces and swallows the per- son whole. This video captures Clammy at his most lethal. After playing catch with a baseball player, the mascot backs up and attacks the unsuspecting man. After a few awskward moments, the player's head disappears and his legs are flailing from Clammy's mouth. The playeris thencompletelyswal- lowed by the gianteclam. Disliking the taste of sweaty clothes, the mascot spits out the player's shoes and uni- form. He then trots off the field, his job done and the crowd stunned. - JASON KOHLER See this and other YouTube videos of the week at youtube.com/user/michigandaity BY THE NUMBERS t i a a - IL LUST RATION BY LAU RA GA RAVOG LI Estimated weight, in pounds, of a prehistoric snake whose remains were discovered by scientists in Columbia Length, in feet, of the snake. It is the biggest snake ever found. Maximum length, in feet, of the modern world's largest snakes, anacondas and pythons THEME PARTY SUGGESTION A worthwhile Valentine's - Don't buy into it again this year: the roses, the candlelight dinner and the box of chocolates. Instead, turn Valentine's Day into a holiday really worth celebrating. Make your Valentine a friend who you've been neglecting - in other words, finally follow through with hanging out, People in relationships should especially consider this. Just think of all the friends you haven't spent time with since you met your sweetheart. Throwing this porty? Let us know TheStotement umich.edu STUDY OF THE WEEK Men who read Maxim struggle with body image Men who look at sexy female models in provocative magazines like Maxim experience more body-image problems than those who don't, according to a study published in the journal Human Communication Research by researchers at the University of Missouri - Columbia. For the study, the researchers conducted three different experiments with male undergraduate students. In the first, they asked 77 students questions about body self-consciousness before and after they started reading the magazines Maxim, FHM and Stuff. In the second experi- ment, the researchers had some students examine layouts of female models while others looked at pictures of fit males. Last, the researchers divided men into two groups: one looked at female models, while the other looked at pictures of their "average-looking" boyfriends. In all three experiments, the researchers concluded that men who looked at the magazineswere more self-conscious about their fitness and body image, saying they didn't have a chance with the female models. - BRIAN TENGEL ls~ Source: CNN /