Listen: Sunday's Championship & League 1 commentariespublished at 19:40 British Summer Time 12 June 2021
Listen to BBC radio commentary from Featherstone Rovers v Bradford Bulls in the Championship.
Read MoreListen to BBC radio commentary from Featherstone Rovers v Bradford Bulls in the Championship.
Read MoreHarlequins end the regular Premiership season in style as they run in eight tries to comfortably beat Newcastle Falcons.
Read MoreJodey Whiting's mother wants the Department for Work and Pensions' role in her death investigating.
Read MoreA 28-year-old woman charged with murder will appear before Teesside magistrates on Monday.
Read MorePublic health bosses are warning they expect further rises in cases of the Indian mutation.
Read MoreListen to BBC Radio commentary as Stockport County host Hartlepool United in the National League play-off semi-finals.
Read MoreEngland all-rounder Sam Curran smashes an unbeaten 72 as Surrey's batsmen fire again to beat Somerset.
Read MoreThe machine allows 18-month-old Grace Westwood to spend several hours outside her hospital ward.
Read MoreWatford sign Middlesbrough striker Ashley Fletcher on a free transfer.
Read MoreListen to BBC Radio commentary from the final day of the regular Premiership season.
Read MoreFour kittens born at the Newcastle Dog and Cat Shelter have been named Harrison, Ford, Indiana and Jones, inspired by the latest Hollywood blockbuster being filmed in the region.
Their mum, Miley, was brought into the shelter as a heavily pregnant stray in March and the kittens arrived five days later.
The very cute kittens will be rehomed once they're old enough.
The property in Marske was hit again this week, and the occupants then ran off.
Read MoreAs Hollywood star Harrison Ford continues to be spotted out and about in the region, filming for the new Indiana Jones 5 movie was under way at Bamburgh Castle last night.
Press Association photographer Owen Humphreys took these dramatic pictures of a scene being filmed on the Northumberland coast.
People in the nearby village were warned in advance there would be "atmospheric smoke, special effects fireworks and flares and gunfire sounds".
A team of Northumbria University researchers is helping to develop a vaccine for an infection that has been killing off rare penguins in New Zealand.
Numbers of yellow-eyed penguins (pictured below) are dwindling due to outbreaks of a diphtheria-like infection which is not treatable with antibiotics and is fatal to chicks.
The team, led by Dr Vartul Sangal, has identified a species of bacteria causing the infections and is hoping a vaccine can be developed to help protect the species from potential extinction.
Melanie Young, from the University of Otago in New Zealand, said: “Avian diphtheria has affected up to 93% of hoiho chicks in their northern range for more than 20 years, with the disease being fatal if left untreated."
The plan was first mooted in 2015 but "apprehension" and the impact of Covid have cooled interest.
Read MoreFirefighters have been tackling a blaze at a disused building in Newcastle.
It started on Thursday afternoon in the derelict bar which was known as Stereo on City Road.
The A186 is closed westbound between the Gibson Street and Forster street junctions due to safety concerns.
It's not the first time there's been a blaze at the site, in 2019 the building was damaged in a suspected arson attack.
Redcar and Cleveland Council says the financial impact was lower than the predicted £10.4m.
Read MoreThe mobile units were set up last month after a surge of the Delta, or so-called Indian, variant.
Read MoreNewcastle Falcons sign prop Richard Palframan and lock George Merrick from Worcester Warriors on two-year deals.
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