Britain's only matador back in ring after surgery
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By Jon Nazca VILLANUEVA DE LA CONCEPTION, Spain (Reuters) - A grandfather in his 60s made his comeback as Britain's only matador at a bullfight in Spain on Sunday, less than a year after a quadruple heart bypass and a knee replacement.
Frank Evans, known as "El Ingles", was forced to hang up his cape three years ago because of an old injury, but on Sunday made a triumphant return with support from a new titanium knee joint at a charity bullfight in Villanueva de la Concepcion, a village in the mountains above Malaga, southern Spain.
The balding pensioner, who turned 66 on Monday, looked a little slower and stiffer than younger rival fighters as he swished his cape under the fierce Andalusian sun.
But, cheered on by hundreds of villagers curious at the sight of an Englishman in the ring, Evans executed elegant passes and killed the 420 kg (92O lb) bull with a single sword thrust, earning him the highest prize a matador can receive -- the bull's severed ears.
"It was nice to get it out of the way and now I hope those who didn't think I could do it will ease off a bit," he said in a telephone interview afterwards.
Evans, the son of a Manchester butcher, was inspired to become a bullfighter after reading about Britain's first matador Vincent Hitchcock as a teenager.
He enrolled in a bullfighting school in Valencia and, after surviving the skepticism of his teachers, fought his first corrida in 1966 thanks to a mix-up by a booking agent who mistook him for another fighter.
Back home, he practiced sword thrusts by stabbing a bail of hay on a supermarket trolley with a pair of horns mounted at the front and in 1991 he became a fully-fledged "matador de toro", who faces the biggest bulls.
Sunday's appearance was the first step on a comeback that he hopes will lead to a full corrida in September and, one day, to Ecuador, Peru and Colombia -- the only bullfighting countries where he has never appeared.
"Now that I am back I will never ever retire no matter what. I will simply fade away one day," he said.
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Confused sea turtles march into Italian restaurant
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ROME (Reuters) - About 60 newly hatched sea turtles lost their way during their ritual passage to the sea and marched into an Italian restaurant instead, a conservation worker said on Monday. The baby turtles -- which ended up under the tables of startled diners at the beachside restaurant -- were probably thrown off track and lured by the eatery's bright lights, said Antonio Colucci, who was called to help rescue the group.
"They saw the artificial lights and took the wrong route," said Colucci, who works on a turtle monitoring project for the conservation group WWF (World Wide Fund for Nature).
"The diners were at first quite curious and then someone alerted the coastal authorities."
The stranded turtles, which had hatched on a beach in the southern Italian region of Calabria, were released into the sea.
Female sea turtles nest on beaches and their offspring instinctively head to the sea after hatching from their eggs.
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