NEW SCAM ALERT WARNING

Mrs Rinehart has not made the alleged investment or recommendations or quotes set forth in these adverts. This is a scam designed to use Mrs Rinehart’s positive corporate image to lure people in to invest.

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Recipient of the Hancock Prospecting and Roy Hill sculpture award as the 20th sculpture by the sea opens at Cottesloe

Mayor of Town of Cottesloe Lorraine Young said: “The Town is delighted to accept this generous donation from Hancock Prospecting and Roy Hill. Sculpture by the Sea is a very significant part of Cottesloe life. To have this wonderful piece added to our sculpture collection is a gift to the Cottesloe community and to the hundreds of thousands of visitors we welcome to Cottesloe every year.”

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Australian Beach Volleyball Tour Arrives in rural Mollymook

The elite beach volleyball National made its way to Mollymook for the first time, delivering an action packed weekend for excited Mollymook residents and guests as part of the annual international Beach Volleyball circui t.Volleyball Australia’s patron, Gina Rinehart, and Principal Partner, Hancock Prospecting, wish all participants the best of luck for a terrific tournament.

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Australian Life | Gina’s mine heart

In an exclusive interview to mark her 70th birthday, Gina Rinehart shares without Editor, Mitch Catlin, that she has no plans to slow down or retire from her extraordinary business career quite the contrary on the back of her purchase of iconic brands, Drizabone, and Rossi Boots, the nations richest woman has marked her milestone birthday with gifts for her staff, and one hell of a planned shopping spree, adding more Aussie brands to her already-large basket.

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She helped found a Mining Empire

This act symbolises the essence of Hope Hancock. Yet all she will say is, “I am an ordinary woman married to a remarkable man.” She underestimates herself, for she is as near the complete person as anyone I have met. Mrs. Hancock describes the gold mine where they had their first home – a caravan – as “a hole in the ground.” It was 100 miles from Wiluna, in the north-west, and her only neighbours were three men who lived in a nearby hut. “But I loved the life,” she said, looking back on those early days. “I had been brought up on a north I west station where conversation revolved round windmills, sheep, and fences, and to go into the new world of mining was very stimulating.”

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