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<p>After the announcement that the next leader of the Roman Catholic Church will be someone from Latin America, San Diego Latino Catholics reacted with enthusiasm that the new pope, for the first time in history, will be a man whose mother tongue is Spanish.</p>
<p>This week, Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, from Buenos Aires, Argentina, was selected to lead the world’s more than one billion Catholics, with almost 40 percent of them hailing from Latin America.</p>

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<p>Después del anuncio que el próximo líder de la Iglesia Católica Romana será alguien de Latinoamérica, los católicos latinos de San Diego reaccionaron con entusiasmo a que el nuevo Papa, por primera vez en la historia, será un hombre cuya lengua materna es el español.</p>
<p>Esta semana, el Cardenal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, de Buenos Aires, Argentina, fue seleccionado para liderar a los más de mil millones de católicos en el mundo, con casi el 40 por ciento de ellos en América Latina.</p>

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<strong> FNS Feature</strong></p>
<p>Many colorful personalities have shared the shade of Acapulco’s Café Astoria. Mayors, politicians, artists, famous singers, writers, tourists, journalists, and revolutionaries of all stripes have all sipped the Guerrero-grown coffee that’s served under the canopy of the gargantuan amate tree embracing a corner of the city’s Zocalo, or historic plaza. But no “guest” has stood out like the bull that stormed into the café one day in November of 1990.</p>