Waltham Abbey seven-year-old dies just a year after being diagnosed with deadliest childhood cancer
Edie Jackson had a rare brain tumour but battled bravely and was supported by a raft of celebrities
Edie Jackson was just six years old when she was diagnosed
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Beauty, hair and skincare experts have revealed the trends you need to know for 2021.
Face-shaping cosmetic surgery trends from the US are set to become popular across the UK as people seek to make their jawlines more defined after spending time looking at themselves on video calls, according to The British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons.
Meanwhile, with face masks restricting make-up experimentation, Hollie Ellis, a PRO makeup artist with Bobbi Brown, predicts the return of bold smokey eyes that dominated Eighties.
Here, FEMAIL rounds up a selection of the biggest trends.
MAKEUP: THE RETURN OF A BOLD EIGHTIES AESTHETIC
For the past two and a half years, Officer Daniel Girard would get ready for his 16-hour shift by putting on his uniform, protective vest and badge. He s also donned a new tool over the past few weeks that could help increase the department’s transparency and allow for further evidence a body camera.
The Mashpee Police Department implemented its body camera pilot program on Dec. 1. Officers who volunteered will wear body cameras during their shifts. After one year, the department will review the pilot program and decide whether to make body cameras permanent for all officers.
Mashpee is the first police department on the Cape to implement the use of body cameras.
cnelson@thealpenanews.com
News Photo by Crystal Nelson
Alpena Public Schools Executive Director of Human Resources Matt Poli, Human Resources Generalist Raelyn Wilber, and Human Resources Administrative Assistant Leslie Reynolds converse recently at the district’s Central Office.
ALPENA A growing number of Alpena Public Schools employees have either resigned or retired over the past five years.
Nine employees retired or resigned in 2015. This year, 68 had left as of Sept. 21, according to information The News obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request.
Three letters of resignation approved by the school board in September indicated the employee resigned because of COVID-19 or the way the pandemic had impacted his or her life, according to documents The News obtained through FOIA, but most departures are because of cyclical retirement trends, district officials say.