Dino footprint found at NASA center

Published: Aug. 18, 2012 at 12:28 PM

GREENBELT, Md., Aug. 18 (UPI) -- A dinosaur footprint tracker says he found a print from a nodosaur at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland that had gone unnoticed for decades.

Ray Stanford, 74, was having lunch at the Goddard cafeteria with his wife, Sheila, June 25 when he made the discovery, The Washington Post reported.

Six years earlier, Stanford found a small triangular chunk of stone stamped with a three-toed footprint, and in June he thought there might be more there.

"I drove by and said, 'There's something sticking out of the ground there,'" he said. "It's a matter of knowing what to look for."

Stanford, who has collected about 1,400 dinosaur footprints and other fossils in his career, then found an impression nearly 14 inches wide that he believes to be from a nodosaur, which were common in Maryland about 112 million years ago.

"These guys were like four-footed tanks," Stanford said of the dinosaur that grew thick, spiky armor adorned with big "nodes."

Stanford showed the print to Johns Hopkins University expert David Weishampel, author of the book "Dinosaurs of the East Coast" and a consultant on the 1993 film "Jurassic Park," who said he thinks it's the real deal.

"Ray showed it to me, and I was overwhelmed," Weishampel said. "As a scientist, I'm skeptical of things like this. But it has all the detail you want. It's got toe prints and sort of a heel print that's starting to erode away."

Goddard's architect and facility manager, Alan Binstock, said he's never heard of dinosaur footprints or fossils being found at any of NASA's 13 nationwide campuses in his 20 years working for the space agency.

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Dino footprint found at NASA center

The Right Medicine?

The Right Medicine can do wonders for individuals with specific issues. Think about the question, Which Medicine Actually Works? well, thats a good question, and theres a good answer. If you have the right medicine that works specifically for you, it can solve various issues, and the same medicine will work with other people if they have the same problem. There are skilled people who can help evaluate your situation, and give a review on what they think is an issue. Special People with Special Skills can do Special Things.

This entry was posted on Sunday, August 19th, 2012 at 6:21 am and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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The Right Medicine?

For a million lifetimes

Young Blood By: Chelsea Angeli R. del Castillo Philippine Daily Inquirer

Medical school is not the place for smart people.

If I am really smart, then Ill get out of the university and start living my life. Like what most of my college friends are doing, Ill probably start making a career and providing for myself. If I am really smart, I wont spend another four years in a university, be in so intimate a relationship with my books, and endure sleepless nights. Stress involving reports, group discussions, and case studies should be out of my vocabulary. My definition of fun and happy should be being with my family, pampering myself, or traveling the world, NOT being dismissed from classes early, acing the examinations, or completing reports with flying colors.

My first weeks in medical school straightened my crooked conviction that intelligence and perseverance combined with enough funds would be sufficient for me to realize my dream of wearing a white coat. Like a hammer blow on the head, getting a chance to experience what medical school is like awakened me to the more grueling realities that take place between admission and board examination. My determination was challenged more than ever, and my lifestyle was changed dramatically right before my eyes: waking up early to beat the clock, catching a glimpse of myself in the mirror and thinking that stress has made me look 10 years older, skipping meals either because I wanted to or I had to, waiting for the redemption bell, going home while thinking of the piles of things that I had to study, wishing that tomorrow would be a holiday, setting my alarm clock, dream, dream, dream, being jolted awake by the much-dreaded alarm, and letting it snooze until I get the courage to face reality

Sometimes, a voice within asks if this is really the life that I intend to live for another four years. Lots of times, thoughts of quitting lure me. My family will certainly understand if I will no longer pursue my studies, I often tell myself. But whenever ideas like these pop up in my boggled mind, what feeds my desire to try harder is the litany of interrogations coming from within. Questions of whether I can understand and forgive myself for giving up just like that awaken my slumbering determination. The things that I have seen, the people that I have been with, and the experiences that I have lived through during my premed years as a nursing student have inspired me to be this tenacious.

Those times, I witnessed how a patient stared at the door while silently waiting for someone whod visit him during the most painful hours of his life. How a sweet smile, how a simple act of concern, and how a genuine caring touch could lighten the face of an old woman on her deathbed. Those times, I listened to the hopes of people living in far-flung communities to see a doctor even just once in their lives. I shared their smiles and tears. I felt their struggles and pains. I heard their silent prayers. People like them have inspired me to study harder, so that someday, while Im on my mission to relieve often and to comfort always, I can also be capable of healing sometimes. It is for them that I dream of being a doctor and they are what make it so difficult to let go.

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For a million lifetimes

Liberty no match for Sun

UNCASVILLE, Conn. Tina Charles was determined to make up for a poor offensive performance against the Liberty in the last matchup. She only had to wait two days to get another chance at them.

Charles had 23 points and nine rebounds while playing nearly 38 minutes, and the Connecticut Sun beat the Liberty 85-74 on Saturday night.

The third-year center, who scored a season-low four points in the Suns 79-66 loss at New York on Thursday night in the teams first game after the monthlong Olympic break, played the entire first half.

I have never not taken her out in the first half, Sun coach Mike Thibault said. I talked to her and said, You let me know when you need a sub tonight. She said, Coach, Im staying out there. So, Yes, maam. I might not say that to some other people, but I know when she is feeling that way. She had that look in her eye. I know she didnt like the other night in New Jersey and she wanted to make up for it.

Kara Lawson had 21 points and Allison Hightower added a career-high 20 for the Eastern Conference-leading Sun (16-5). Mistie Mims, playing in place of the injured Asjha Jones (strained left Achilles tendon), added 11 points, four rebounds and four assists.

We had some people step up pretty big-time tonight and make shots between Tina in the first half and Kara and Allie throughout the game, and Mistie was everywhere on the boards, Thibault said.

Charles also became the fastest player in WNBA history to reach 1,000 rebounds, accomplishing it in her 89th game three fewer than Yolanda Griffiths previous mark.

Cappie Pondexter had 17 points and five assists for the Liberty (7-13). Essence Carson also scored 17 and Plenette Pierson added 14 points and eight rebounds.

Connecticut capitalized on 26 Liberty turnovers, scoring 28 points off the miscues.

We went from six turnovers the other night to 26 tonight, Liberty coach John Whisenant said. We have to keep our turnovers under 15 to compete with a team like that. ... We got them the other night and they made a lot of turnovers. We made eight turnovers in the first quarter (tonight) and that just digs you a big hole.

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Liberty no match for Sun

Charles scores 23 to lead Sun past Liberty

UNCASVILLE, Conn. (AP) -- Tina Charles was determined to make up for a poor offensive performance against the New York Liberty in the last matchup. She only had to wait two days to get another chance at them.

Charles had 23 points and nine rebounds while playing nearly 38 minutes, and the Connecticut Sun beat the Liberty 85-74 on Saturday night.

The third-year center, who scored a season-low four points in the Sun's 79-66 loss at New York on Thursday night in the teams' first game after the monthlong Olympic break, played the entire first half.

''I have never not taken her out in the first half,'' Sun coach Mike Thibault said. ''I talked to her and said, 'You let me know when you need a sub tonight.' She said, 'Coach, I'm staying out there.' So, 'Yes, ma'am.' I might not say that to some other people, but I know when she is feeling that way. She had that look in her eye. I know she didn't like the other night in New Jersey and she wanted to make up for it.''

Kara Lawson had 21 points and Allison Hightower added a career-high 20 for the Eastern Conference-leading Sun (16-5). Mistie Mims, playing in place of the injured Asjha Jones (strained left Achilles tendon), added 11 points, four rebounds and four assists.

''We had some people step up pretty big-time tonight and make shots - between Tina in the first half and Kara and Allie throughout the game, and Mistie was everywhere on the boards,'' Thibault said.

Charles also became the fastest player in WNBA history to reach 1,000 rebounds, accomplishing it in her 89th game - three fewer than Yolanda Griffith's previous mark.

Cappie Pondexter had 17 points and five assists for the Liberty (7-13). Essence Carson also scored 17 and Plenette Pierson added 14 points and eight rebounds.

Connecticut capitalized on 26 New York turnovers, scoring 28 points off the miscues.

''We went from six turnovers the other night to 26 tonight,'' Liberty coach John Whisenant said. ''We have to keep our turnovers under 15 to compete with a team like that. ... We got them the other night and they made a lot of turnovers. We made eight turnovers in the first quarter (tonight) and that just digs you a big hole.''

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Charles scores 23 to lead Sun past Liberty

Pa. GOP targets 2 parties' petitions

HARRISBURG - The state Republican Party is challenging candidate petitions by members of the Constitution and Libertarian Parties, seeking to bounce from the state ballot candidates for president, vice president, and several other offices.

Line-by-line reviews of the candidates' petition signatures ordered by a state Commonwealth Court judge will begin Monday at the Philadelphia Board of Elections.

Analysts say Republicans are probably worried that conservatives dissatisfied with their presidential candidate, Mitt Romney, will defect to Constitution or Libertarian candidates.

The issues that tend to attract those two party's activists, such as limited government, tend to also be key for many Republicans, said Terry Madonna, a professor of public affairs and director of the Center for Opinion Research at Franklin and Marshall College.

In the most recent public poll, released Thursday by Franklin and Marshall, President Obama is ahead of Romney, 44 percent to 38 percent, with 15 percent undecided. The poll's margin of error is plus or minus 3.8 percentage points.

A Republican Party spokeswoman said the GOP was challenging the nominating papers because they are riddled with errors, and the party is concerned that Democrats are behind the petitions.

The petitions, spokeswoman Valerie Caras said, were circulated by and signed largely by Democrats.

The president of the Libertarian Party of Pennsylvania, Tom Stevens, said the petition drive was financed strictly by Libertarian Party members and the campaign of former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson, the party's candidate for president.

"It's part of no plot, and no money is coming from Democrats to finance our petition drive," Stevens said.

He said it may be true that the signers and circulators were Democrats. But they were hired exclusively by a contractor for the national Libertarian Party, and they must accurately represent the Libertarian Party and its philosophies, he said.

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Pa. GOP targets 2 parties' petitions

Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson may sway voters

1:00 AM

By Steve Mistler smistler@pressherald.com Staff Writer

Gary Johnson isn't a household name in Maine or most other places, yet the Libertarian presidential candidate could become an attractive option at the ballot box for some of the same voters who helped sweep Republicans into power here just two years ago.

click image to enlarge

Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson

AP photo

The former New Mexico governor will be on the Nov. 6 ballot in 34 states, including Maine. National pundits say Johnson has no chance of winning the presidency, but some believe he could be a spoiler candidate in several swing states, such as Nevada, Virginia, Florida, North Carolina and Colorado. Although Maine isn't among those states, Johnson's level of appeal may signal the future of the Maine Republican Party.

The reason isn't just Johnson's platform of limited government and fiscal conservatism, key tenets of the tea party and the current energy core of the Republican Party.

It's also because an increasingly bitter standoff between establishment Republicans and the so-called liberty movement could spur some tea party voters to abandon the presumptive Republican nominee, Mitt Romney.

Johnson backers certainly hope so.

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Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson may sway voters

Uphsur Libertarian’s Not Happy With Choice of Paul Ryan

GILMER--Members of the Upshur County Libertarian Party at their monthly meeting last week criticized the selection of Paul Ryan as presumptive Republican Presidential nominee Mitt Romney's choice for his running mate.

"This guy'll (Ryan) really sink him (Romney) because he's chairman of the (House) Budget Committee, and look where the (federal) budget is," said Criss Bartley during the Aug. 14 meeting at the Buckeye Cafe.

Allen Weatherford and Upshur County Libertarian Chairman Vance Lowry ridiculed Ryan's budget plan, saying it would take 40 years to balance the budget. However, Lowry said he saw a "silver lining" in Ryan's selection in that the vice-presidential candidate had read "Ayn Rand, which is the patron saint" of the Libertarian Party.

"He's a decent guy, plus a good Catholic boy," said Lowry, himself a Catholic.

But former county Libertarian Chairman Mark Grimes said Ryan "voted for all of this TARP (the Troubled Assets Relief Program) and everything else," and said the candidate "voted for some of this stuff he's railing against" now.

Grimes, a Union Pacific Railroad worker, also said "Paul Ryan made all the railroaders mad because he went after railroad retirement." Ryan "thought it was costing the government money," but railroad workers (including company officers) totally fund the retirement, Grimes said.

Meantime, Weatherford praised the Libertarians' vice-presidential nominee, James Ray, who is running with the party's Presidential candidate, Gary Johnson. Weatherford said Ray quit the Republican Party over the Patriot Act.

Lowry said Ray is a judge who wants to "decriminalize the drug war" or devise a different approach to the drug issue, if possible.

As for the top of the presumed Republican Presidential ticket, Weatherford charged "Romney's like the husband your wife decides on, they settle for."

Also at last week's meeting, the Upshur Libertarians discussed their U.S. Senate candidate, John Jay Myers, who was scheduled to make appearances in Tyler and Mt. Pleasant Tuesday, Aug. 21. Weatherford organized the Mt. Pleasant gathering.

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Uphsur Libertarian’s Not Happy With Choice of Paul Ryan

Flags, tensions rise over disputed islands

Japan's territorial disputes with its neighbours flared anew on Sunday as a group of nationalist activists swam ashore and raised flags on an island also claimed by China.

Chinese took to the streets in protest, as Beijing lodged a formal complaint, urging Tokyo to prevent frictions from escalating further.

Ten Japanese made an unauthorised landing on Uotsuri, the largest in a small archipelago known in Japan as the Senkaku Islands and in China as the Diaoyu Islands.

The uninhabited islands surrounded by rich fishing grounds are controlled by Japan but also claimed by China and Taiwan.

Of the 10 who visited the island, five were conservative local assembly members.

"The Senkakus are undoubtedly Japanese territory," said Eiji Kosaka, an assembly man from Tokyo's Arakawa district.

"It is to be expected that Japanese would take that to heart."

China's Foreign Ministry protested, summoning Japan's ambassador to voice its complaints.

"The Japanese side should properly handle the current issue and avoid seriously damaging the overall situation of China-Japan relations," ministry spokesman Qin Gang said in a statement.

Tokyo rejected a complaint by China's ambassador to Japan, Cheng Yonghua, according to Japan's Foreign Ministry.

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Flags, tensions rise over disputed islands

HEALTH: As hospital opens, officials bet on innovation

North County's new hospital was set to start receiving patients at 7 a.m. Sunday, altering the region's health care landscape and capping a process that began 18 years ago with a Los Angeles earthquake.

The 1994 Northridge quake ---- which damaged 11 medical centers ---- prompted lawmakers to mandate that all hospitals in California be retrofitted by 2013 to meet tougher seismic standards.

The deadline has been extended for many hospitals. Yet it spurred the leaders of Palomar Pomerado Health to look long and hard at their dated Palomar Medical Center and decide ---- given the work a retrofit would require ---- that it was time to start from scratch. After significant study, they eventually chose a site on a hill in Escondido overlooking Highway 78 and Interstate 15.

At a cost of nearly $1 billion, Palomar officials designed the hospital to take advantage of the latest research in preventing infections, speeding emergency care and helping patients heal more quickly. And administrators also expect such innovations to help the state's largest public health district compete more effectively for doctors and patients in the rapidly evolving health care economy in San Diego County.

The new building's design, with its 11-story, glass "vertical garden" and private patient rooms sporting flat-screen TVs, mirrors the district's goal to transform how a hospital functions.

Central nursing stations have been eliminated in favor of smaller, room-side kiosks where nurses ---- all equipped with smartphones ---- can keep a closer eye on patients and receive instant messages that eliminate the need for noisy intercoms. Sunlight floods into nearly every room, including surgical suites, a feature that experts say promotes healing.

Board Chairman Ted Kleiter said last week that the project was designed for the long haul, for his children and grandchildren.

"We said, We're not going to build a hospital for today. We're going to build a hospital for the next 50 years,' and that's what we did," Kleiter said.

Health care district CEO Michael Covert declined several requests for an interview. In a written statement Thursday, he said that the district had met its goal "... to create a uniquely flexible, future-oriented facility that would combine all of the principles that have been studied for many years to enhance the care and safety and well-being of patients and their families on one site ..."

A long journey

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HEALTH: As hospital opens, officials bet on innovation

Poll shows health care, jobs, economy and government stir heated discussions

What do you think is the most important issue our country is facing?

Jobs? Taxes? Health care?

Now, is this something you can talk to your neighbor about without getting angry?

Most of the time, the answer to this question is: No!

A recent poll shows that the issues Akron-Canton area adults point to as most important can be tough to talk about. More than half of those surveyed said discussions of health care, jobs and government spending/taxes were very likely to spark heated discussions.

This might help explain why civility can be so difficult.

For most people, its harder when they feel strongly about an issue, said John Green, director of the University of Akrons Bliss Institute of Applied Politics. I do think those priorities and the fact they perceive they can cause heated discussions are very likely related.

The Center for Marketing and Opinion Research in Akron recently conducted a poll that asked 600 randomly selected adults in the five-county Akron-Canton area their thoughts about civility and politics. The topics included what issues they think are most important, which issues are likely to promote heated discussions and what can be done to improve political conversations. The margin of error was plus or minus 4 percentage points.

The poll was funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and is part of a joint civility project launched by the Bliss Institute, the Beacon Journal and the faith community, aimed at changing the way people talk about tough issues.

Bliss and the Beacon Journal also conducted four weeks of focus groups to get a better understanding of the high level of anxiety in the country. Two Mad as Hell focus groups, one with younger adults and another with older adults, further probed the civility issues explored in the poll.

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Poll shows health care, jobs, economy and government stir heated discussions

Freedom Elementary School full from the get-go

Freedom Elementary library

Heidi Wolf unpacks and organizes almost 7,300 new books in the media center last week at the new Freedom Elementary School in West Fargo. When the school opens its doors Thursday, it will welcome 561 students. Dave Wallis / The Forum

Do you have children starting school this week?

WEST FARGO - Freedom Elementary opens here this week and its already full.

The newest building in the rapidly growing West Fargo School District is expected to greet 561 students when classes start Thursday, said Principal Jeff Johnson.

Its built to handle 550.

Plans were to have the school open with 470 students when the school board approved construction last year, Business Manager Mark Lemer said.

We knew we were going to have growth, he said. But we didnt anticipate that it would open over its maximum capacity.

You can thank the great construction weather this past year, Johnson said. It helped builders pepper the area with homes for young families.

Freedom is patterned after Aurora Elementary, which opened in fall 2007 in the Eagle Run area. Using that template saved at least $180,000 in architectural fees on the new school just south of Interstate 94 and west of Veterans Boulevard, Lemer said.

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Freedom Elementary School full from the get-go

Freedom come from Behind for Win, Keep Playoff Hopes Alive

August 18, 2012 - Frontier League (FL) Florence Freedom Florence, KY - The Florence Freedom(45-38) kept their playoff hopes alive with a come from behind 7-5 victory Saturday night over the Southern Illinois Miners (49-33). The Freedom trail the Gateway Grizzlies by 3.5 games for the final wild card spot with 13 games to go.

It was homerun derby early on at the Home of the Florence Freedom as Southern Illinois right fielder Chad Maddox hit a three run homerun in the 1st inning against Freedom starter Alec Lewis. After the Miners took a 3-0 lead in their first inning, the Freedom's Eddie Rodriguez deposited a line drive two-run homerun over the left field wall to make it 3-2. It was his 8th homerun of the season. The Freedom got another homerun in the 3rd. John Malloy led off the inning as he hit a solo shot down the right field line to tie the game at 3-3. Malloy leads the Freedom with 12 homeruns. The homerun derby continued for the Miners in the 5th. With one out and one on, Ken Gregory launched a two run homerun off Brent Choban to take a 5-3 lead.

The Freedom were resilient though and stormed back in the 5th. Malloy opened up the inning with a double. David Harris then walked. Junior Arrojo attempted a bunt, but popped out to third baseman Carlos Mendez on a diving catch. Peter Fatse then was hit by a pitch to load the bases. With the bases loaded and one out, Rodriguez was then plunked forcing home Malloy to cut the lead to 5-4. Kyle Bluestein popped out to shortstop Jake Kaase for the second out of the inning. Catcher Jim Jacquot then delivered the blow in the game with his bases loaded two out two run single back up the middle giving the Freedom a 6-5 lead. Stephen Cardullo then doubled to right field scoring Rodriguez to give the Freedom a 7-5 advantage.

The Miners threatened in the 9th against Freedom closer Jorge Marban. With runners on the corners with one out, Marban got Gregory to line out to left field and struck out Jason Ganek to end the game.

Jose Velazquez(6-0) earned the victory out of relief recording the final two outs in the 5th. Marban racked up his 9th save. Lewis went only 2 innings allowing 3 hits and 3 earned runs while allowing the three run homer to Maddox.

The Freedom will go for the series victory Sunday night against the Miners. Southern Illinois will start LHP Daniel Calhoun(6-3, 2.39) while the Freedom will go with RHP Brandon Mathes(3-0, 3.25) The game can be heard starting at 5:50 with Steve Jarnicki on Real Talk 1160 AM and realtalk1160.com.

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The opinions expressed in this release are those of the organization issuing it, and do not necessarily reflect the thoughts or opinions of OurSports Central or its staff.

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Freedom come from Behind for Win, Keep Playoff Hopes Alive

Strikeforce champ Ronda Rousey wants 'Cyborg' next, but adamant she drop to 135

by Matt Erickson on Aug 19, 2012 at 3:50 am ET

Rousey (6-0 MMA, 4-0 SF) on Saturday defended her Strikeforce women's bantamweight title, and again did it with ease, getting former champ Sarah Kaufman (15-2 MMA, 6-2 SF) to tap to her signature armbar less than a minute into the first round in San Diego.

Rousey had been in a relatively new war of words with Santos even before the Kaufman fight. And now that she has cleared her latest hurdle, Rousey wasted no time setting her sights on the Brazilian.

The first problem is that Santos (10-1 MMA, 4-0 SF), the former Strikeforce featherweight titleholder, currently is suspended after testing positive for steroids following a 16-second win over Hiroko Yamanaka this past December. (The fight was overturned to a no contest.) The yearlong shutdown means a potential Rousey-Santos fight is at least four months away, provided Santos gets re-licensed with no delays.

And the second is that Santos has been less than thrilled about the prospect of dropping from 145 to 135, where Rousey now holds the title. That, Rousey said, is too bad.

"She was champion and I knew she was doping, but I couldn't prove it," Rousey said at Saturday's post-event news conference at the Valley View Casino Center. "That was how she wanted to become a champion. Now the situation is changed, and she was stripped of her title for good reason. Now she has to come to me I don't owe her anything. She needs to fight me more than I need to fight her. There are plenty of girls they all want to beat me up now. Who else is she going to fight, really? She needs to come to me."

Rousey called out Santos in her post-fight interview with Mauro Ranallo on the Showtime broadcast and is firm in her belief that the former champ should have to make the move to 135 if she wants the fight.

Strikeforce CEO Scott Coker sounds like he would love to see a Rousey-Santos fight but knows it's a pipe dream until Santos' suspension is lifted.

"That's a fight we definitely have on the radar," Coker told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com). "Ronda clearly said she wants that fight to happen. But Cyborg is on suspension right now, and until she gets off we really don't have a fight. So when she gets off, we'll start having the conversation."

Coker also believes when the fight does happen, it's destined to become the new high-water mark for a Showtime MMA broadcast.

Continued here:

Strikeforce champ Ronda Rousey wants 'Cyborg' next, but adamant she drop to 135

Ronda Rousey Calls Out Cyborg After 54-Second Win over Sarah Kaufman

After weeks of both of Strikeforce's top female fighters, Ronda Rousey and Cris Cyborg, taking shots at one another, tonight the official call-out took place.

Following Rousey's quick submission win over Sarah Kaufman, when being interviewed by Mauro Ranallo, Rousey immediately called out Cyborg.

Rousey said (h/t Mike Chiappetta, mmafighting.com), "I need to send out a challenge to Miss Cyborg out there. People want to see the first fair fight of your life. I'm the champ now. The champ doesn't go to you, you go to the champ. Come down to 135 and let's settle this."

Earlier this week, when reports suggested Cyborg wanted the fight at 145, Rousey stated on TSN Radio's The MMA Report with John Pollock (h/t Chiappetta, mmafighting.com) that to make the 135-pound weight cut Cyborg should, "Stop doping and lose weight."

The fight needs no hype at all. Rousey has looked simply unstoppable since hertransitionto MMA from judo. She's 6-0 with all her wins coming by first-round submission via her lethal armbar. But Rousey isn't the first dominate female in Strikeforce.

Before there was Rousey, there was Cris Cyborg. Cyborg is 10-1, with eight of her wins coming by way of knockout. She's one of the most powerful women ever to compete in MMA, and before her recent positive drug test, she was considered to best female fighter on theplanet.

Cyborg's year-long suspension will end sometime in December, and the potential of a bout between Rousey and Cyborg should have all MMA fansnot just fans of women's MMApumped for what could lie ahead.

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Ronda Rousey Calls Out Cyborg After 54-Second Win over Sarah Kaufman