I.down1[美 daʊn, 英 daʊn]副down often appears as the second element of certain verb structures in English (back down, clamp down, tone down, etc). For translations, see the relevant verb entry (back, clamp, tone, etc).
Besides, not enforcing it has so many benefits -- gives the bowlers a chance to get off the ground for a shower and a rub down, maybe even some decent sleep.
Crucially, though, it makes no mention of the room service operator's later claims the 58-year-old star hugged him while naked before asking for a rub down.
On a daily basis the children were stripped and were given a rub down of an unknown lotion and placed under what my mom describes as three heat lamps connected.