Former Fortescue Executive Moves From Iron Ore to Movies: Video
March 18 (Bloomberg) -- Bloomberg's Heidi Couch reports on former Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. Executive Director Graeme Rowley's move from mining to movie-making. Rowley co-founded Fortescue, Australias third-biggest iron ore producer, with Andrew Forrest, the nation's richest person. Rowley resigned from his role with the company on March 2. (Source: Bloomberg)
Philip Schneider was an ex-government structural engineer who was involved in building underground military bases around the United States , and to be one of only three people to survive an incident that occurred in 1979 between Grey aliens and US military forces at the Dulce underground base . For the last two years of his life, Schneider gave lectures about government cover-ups, black budgets, and UFOs. Schneider was never able or willing to prove his allegations (eg showing the entrance to Dulce Base). His claims received little mainstream notice, but caused quite a buzz in UFO enthusiast circles. Phil Schneider died on Januarv 17, 1996, reportedly strangled by a catheter found wrapped around his neck -- the bizarre death being dismissed by the authorities as suicide. If the circumstances of his death seem highly controversial, they are matched by the controversy over his public statements uttered shortly before his death. Phil Schneider was a self-taught geologist and explosives expert. Of the 129 deep underground facilities Schneider believed the US government had constructed since World War II, he claimed to have worked on 13. Two of these bases were major, including the much rumored bioengineering facility at Dulce, New Mexico. At Dulce, Schneider maintained, "gray" humanoid extraterrestrials worked side by side with American technicians. In 1979, a misunderstanding arose. In the ensuing shootout, 66 Secret Service, FBI and Black Berets were killed along with an ...
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