Press
Newspaper headlines: UK's 'most evil funeral director' and 'Back to the moon'
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With the headline: "Faces Of The Betrayed" the front page of the Daily Mirror features images of some of those whose remains were not properly handled by Robert Bush - an undertaker in Hull who yesterday admitted more than 30 charges. The Daily Mail says it's feared thousands of families may have fallen victim to what the paper describes as "Britain's most evil funeral director", while the Daily Express highlights calls for him to "rot in jail" when he is sentenced in July. The Times says the energy secretary, Ed Miliband, is expected to approve the first major North Sea oil and gas project in almost a decade as ministers face pressure to increase drilling during the war against Iran. The Daily Telegraph notes what it calls a "rare attack" on Donald Trump by the Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch after she accused the US president of making a "mess" in the Middle East and criticised what she said was his lack of a co-ordinated plan. The Guardian says the property developer, Nick Candy, has sold his mansion in Chelsea for a reported £275m in a transaction described by the paper as "the most expensive on record in London and one of the biggest in the world". Candy, who is the honorary treasurer of Reform UK and a major donor to the party, has declined to comment. The identity of the buyer has not been made public. A fault with the toilet on board Nasa's Orion spacecraft is the main news for the Sun, which calls the problem "one giant leak for mankind". But the Daily Star says fears that the astronauts "had nowhere to boldly go" were resolved when the Artemis II mission control in Houston gave them instructions on how to mend it. According to the Times, crowds were left "in awe" by the launch of Orion when it blasted off from Florida yesterday. The paper picks out the emotional response of the BBC's science editor, Rebecca Morelle saying she addressed viewers with "tears in her eyes" in a reaction that "soon went viral". Sign up for our morning newsletter and get BBC News in your inbox.