The Clinton Herald, Clinton, Iowa

AP story section

March 13, 2013

Argentine Jorge Bergoglio has been elected pope. He chose the name Pope Francis.

VATICAN CITY — Argentine Jorge Bergoglio has been elected pope, the first ever from the Americas and the first from outside Europe in more than a millennium. He chose the name Pope Francis.

“Pope Live” follows the choice of the new pope as seen by journalists from The Associated Press around the world.

___

WHITE SMOKE OR NOT?

In St. Peter’s Square, there was a fleeting moment of indecision when the first plumes of smoke appeared from the Vatican chimney.

Some cried out that it was black, signifying that no decision was made by the conclave. Then, seconds later under a steady rain, it became clear that white smoke was pouring out.

Wild cheering erupted in the square.

“Oh no, it’s black!” said an Italian nun, Sister Eugenia. “It’s white! It’s white!’

Ben Canete, a 32-year-old Filipino, jumped up and down shouting: “Viva il Papa!”

“I can’t explain how happy I am right now,” he said.

___

‘LONG LIVE THE POPE’

Throngs in St. Peter’s Square are chanting “Long live the pope!,” many of them with tears in their eyes.

There are least 50,000 people in the square. Crowds went wild as the Vatican and Italian military bands marched through and up the steps of the basilica, followed by Swiss Guards in silver helmets and full regalia.

They played the introduction to the Vatican and Italian anthems and the crowd joined in, waving flags from around the country.

___

CHOOSING A NAME

Every time a new pontiff is chosen in a conclave, a senior cardinal goes up to him and asks: “And by what name do want to be called?”

The question is popped immediately, while all electors are still locked in the Sistine chapel. So the winner had better have done his homework and already picked a name.

Shortly after, the senior cardinal reads out the pontifical name in Latin from the main balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica as part of the “Habemus Papam” — “We have a pope” — formula that proclaims the election of a new pope.

— Daniela Petroff

___

PAPAL DIGS

The new pope can’t move into the papal apartment just yet.

He will remain with the cardinals at the Vatican’s Santa Marta hotel, an impersonal modern hotel on the edge of the Vatican gardens where they have been sequestered since the beginning of the conclave.

He will spend his first night as pontiff in a room that features a bed with a dark wood headboard and a carved image of Christ’s face, as well as a sitting area and a study.

The new pope is expected to stay there for a few weeks until the papal apartment in the Apostolic Palace can be renovated. The apartment was sealed Feb. 28, just after Benedict resigned, and cannot be reopened until the new pope formally takes possession.

— Nicole Winfield — Twitter http://twitter.com/nwinfield

___

TWITTER HANDLE

The pope’s Twitter account, whose profile was changed to read “Sede Vacante” when Benedict stepped down, now has been switched back to “Pontifex.”

No tweets yet.

___

https://twitter.com/pontifex

___

DRESSED UP

The pope’s new clothes were ready before he was.

The family-owned Gammarelli tailor shop, which has dressed popes for two centuries, had three sets of vestments — in small, medium and large — prepared for the naming of the new pontiff.

The papal outfits were on display in the window of the small wood-paneled store nestled in the shadow of the Pantheon, where the family moved in 1850 from the original founded just around the corner in 1798. They were delivered to the Vatican and left in a room next to the Sistine Chapel, ready for the new pope to change into his new clothes.

The pre-made looks haven’t always fit. In 1958, the rotund John XXIII appeared on the balcony with safety pins holding together the back of his cassock.

— Daniela Petroff

___

QUICK DECISION

It was a fairly quick decision.

In centuries past, conclaves dragged on for weeks and months, sometimes years. During a 13th-century conclave that stretched for weeks, a leading candidate died.

These days the discussions are much quicker. The pope was chosen in five rounds over two days.

The previous conclave that chose Benedict XVI went four rounds over two days before the Latin announcement rang out across St. Peter’s Square from the basilica’s balcony: “Habemus papam” — We have a pope!

The longest conclave of the last century went on for 14 rounds over five days, and yielded Pius XI — in 1922.

— Frances D’Emilio — Twitter http://twitter.com/fdemilio

___

WHO VOTED FOR ME?

One thing is sure — the new pope will never truly know who voted for him.

Cardinals used to sign their names to ballots, but stopped doing so “due to an old history of intrigues and tensions, when people used to fear the most serious reprisals for their choices,” says Michael Bruter, who teaches political science at the London School of Economics.

Even so, factions of cardinals will have made their views known during informal talks between votes.

Romain Lachat, a political scientist at Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona, says the formation of coalitions — where voting cardinals slowly rally around a man who may only be their second or third choice — is inevitable.

There is no formal process of elimination and cardinals can even vote for themselves — which may explain why conclaves often need more than one round of balloting to produce a pope.

— Frank Jordans — Twitter http://twitter.com/wirereporter

___

THE BIG SMOKE

The ballots are tied together with needle and thread and are then placed in an iron stove. If the smoke coming out of the chimney is white — not black — it means there’s a pope.

The signal hasn’t always been so clear. In 1958, damp straw didn’t catch fire, and the smoke was white instead of black. After John Paul’s death in 2005, the Vatican used special chemicals in an effort to make the color clear — with only limited success.

If in doubt, the bells of St. Peter’s Basilica also ring when a new pope has been chosen.

— Frances D’Emilio — Twitter http://twitter.com/fdemilio

___

VATICAN SECURITY

Throngs of the faithful are in St. Peter’s Square, ready to cheer the new pope when he steps out onto the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica. The vast square in Rome is a sea of umbrellas, flags and chanting crowds.

The Vatican’s security force, known as the gendarmerie, is in charge of those inside the square, while Italian police handle crowd control just outside the Vatican’s boundaries. Security officers from both forces include plainclothes agents dressed up as tourists, watching for any unusual movement.

A tented field hospital went up near the Vatican before the conclave began.

There have been a few “trial runs” of crowd control. Pope Benedict XVI’s public audience drew so many people — some 150,000 — that there wasn’t enough space for all in the cobblestone square.

— Frances D’Emilio — Twitter http://twitter.com/fdemilio

___

NEXT STEPS

He will stop and pray in the Pauline Chapel for a few minutes before emerging on the loggia of the balcony overlooking St. Peter’s Square.

Preceding him to the balcony is French Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, the protodeacon, who announces “Habemus Papam!” Latin for “We have a pope” and then introduces him to the world in Latin.

He then emerges and delivers his first public words as the leader of the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics.

— Nicole Winfield — Twitter http://twitter.com/nwinfield

___

NEW POPE

White smoke is pouring out from the Sistine Chapel chimney in St. Peter’s Square, signaling that a new pope will appear on the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica within the hour.

_____

Follow AP reporters on Twitter where available.

 

Text Only
AP story section
  • HIV Teacher Assault HIV-infected teacher's aide accused of molestation ST. LOUIS -- An Illinois special-needs teaching assistant accused of molesting a teenage student in school while knowingly infected with HIV remained jailed Tuesday as police investigated another claim of similar misconduct by the man involving a dif

    May 15, 2013 1 Photo

  • Drunken Driving Zero Deaths Tougher threshold recommended WASHINGTON, D.C. -- States should cut their threshold for drunken driving by nearly half -- from .08 blood alcohol level to 0.5 -- matching a standard that has substantially reduced highway deaths in other countries, a U.S. safety board recommends. T

    May 15, 2013 1 Photo

  • 5-10-13 Office Wrap party photo Scranton shared close bond SCRANTON, Pa. -- NBC's long-running "The Office" was a faux documentary about cubicle life. The Scranton branch of Dunder Mifflin Paper Co. didn't exist. Try telling that to merchants, tourism officials and regular folks here in the real-world city

    May 10, 2013 1 Photo

  • Baby Names King, Messiah: New baby names suggest high hopes WASHINGTON — Talk about high expectations for a newborn: King and Messiah are among the fastest-rising baby names for American boys. They're just a little behind Major, the boy's name that jumped the most spots on the Social Security Administration

    May 10, 2013 1 Photo

  • Crowds swoon, but Prince Harry is all business

    The British soldier-prince is spending most of his week in the U.S. honoring the wounded and the dead of war, a salute that began Thursday at a land-mine exhibition in Congress at the side of one of America's most storied wounded warriors, Sen. John McCain.

    May 10, 2013

  • Missing Women Found-12 Suspect in Ohio kidnappings due in court CLEVELAND (AP) -- Three women found alive after a decade in captivity endured lonely, dark lives inside a dingy home where they were raped and allowed outside only a handful of times in disguises while walking to a garage steps away, investigators sa

    May 9, 2013 7 Photos

  • Former US official describes Libya attack

    A former top diplomat in Libya on Wednesday delivered a riveting minute-by-minute account of the chaotic events during the deadly assault on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi last September, with a 2 a.m. call from Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and confusion about the fate of U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens.

    May 9, 2013

  • Fashion Met Exhibit Punk-6 Punk finds its place in hallowed halls of Met NEW YORK — Punk and high fashion can now share the same stage, and a new Costume Institute exhibit at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, "Punk: Chaos to Culture," celebrates that influence. It's an enduring irony that probably makes punk's rebellious o

    May 8, 2013 4 Photos

  • Tanning BEds FDA FDA wants cancer warnings on tanning beds WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Indoor tanning beds would come with new warnings about the risk of cancer and be subject to more stringent federal oversight under a proposal unveiled Monday by the Food and Drug Administration. The FDA has regulated tanning beds

    May 8, 2013 1 Photo

  • Survey: US home prices up 10.5 pct. in past year

    A survey shows U.S. home prices rose 10.5 percent in March compared with a year ago, the biggest gain since March 2006.

    May 8, 2013

AP Video
Facebook
News Digest