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a rail line speeding nearly 100,000 people a day along a route
connecting Venezuela's main port, Puerto Cabello, with Valencia and the
country's other major central city, Maracay.She says it will be ready in
2012.Yet not a single section is complete after a decade of construction.The
railway may be the most visible symbol of unfulfilled promises in Chavez's
14 years as president. It is the heart of his ambitious plan
to create a network of lines across Venezuela, a nation that now
has a sum total of 40 kilometers (25 miles) of operating tracks.In
Maracay, three-story concrete pylons linked by monstrous girders parallel
Venezuela's main central highway. The elevated rail bed halts abruptly at
road crossings. There are phantom stations."This is going really slow,"
construction worker Anselmo Mendoza, 46, said while walking atop one section,
its steel bolts, plates and rebar coated with rust. "There isn't any
type of coordination."Mendoza has been on the job nine years. Most days,
he and his co-workers try to keep busy with work often unrelated
to actual construction.Billions have been spent so far on the 128-kilometer
(80-mile) project.Transportation Ministry spokesman Alexis Cabrera was asked
for information on construction delays and budgets. He said he would need
to ask the minister for permission, but didn't call back.At campaign rallies,
Capriles always rattles off a list of Chavez's unfinished projects.On Wednesday
night in April 3, 2013: Bitcoin tokens at 35-year-old software engineer Mike Caldwell's
shop in Sandy, Utah. Caldwell mints physical versions of bitcoins, cranking
out homemade tokens with codes protected by tamper-proof holographic seals.AP
Photo/Rick BowmerApril 3, 2013: Mike Caldwell, a 35-year-old software engineer,
looks over bitcoin tokens at his shop in Sandy, Utah. Caldwell mints
physical versions of bitcoins, cranking out homemade tokens with codes protected
by tamper-proof holographic seals.AP Photo/Rick BowmerApril 3, 2013: Mike
Caldwell, a 35-year-old software engineer, poses with bitcoin tokens at
his shop in Sandy, Utah.AP Photo/Rick BowmerNEW YORK With $600 stuffed
in one pocket and a smartphone tucked in the other, Patricio Fink
recently struck the kind of deal that's feeding the rise of a
new kind of money -- a virtual currency whose oscillations have pulled
geeks and speculators alike through stomach-churning highs and lows.The
Argentine software developer was dealing in bitcoins -- getting an injection
of the cybercurrency in exchange for a wad of real greenbacks he
handed to a pair of Australian tourists in a Buenos Aires Starbucks.
The visitors wanted spending money at black market rates without the risk
of getting roughed up in one of the Argentine capital's black market
exchanges. Fink wanted to pad his electronic wallet.In the safety of the
coffee shop, the tourists transferred Fink their bitcoins through an app
on their
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