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The young Dons defender looks back on his shock cup final start against Celtic, the anguish of watching the penalty shoot-out from the sidelines and the unbridled joy at winning the cup.
The vanquishing of more than three decades of pain in the Scottish Cup was over. Stenhousemuir, Queen of the South, Darvel.
Joy Milne, a retired nurse from Scotland, discovered she could detect Parkinson’s disease by smell after noticing a musky ...
It might not have been pretty, but Aberdeen's long-awaited Scottish Cup final victory was one for raw emotion, writes Tom ...
A woman who was able to 'smell' her husband's disease 12 years before it developed is helping scientists develop new ways to ...
When you’re juggling work, family life and an ever-growing to-do list, it can be hard to find those quiet, precious moments ...
"Superhuman smell" sounds like a phrase that belongs in a world of superheroes and villains, but it's real. And it might have ...
Joy Milne first smelled the disease on her late husband, Les, 17 years before he was diagnosed with it Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock Joy Milne can smell Parkinson's disease and is working with ...
Fox Foundation. Joy Milne, a former nurse, claims that illnesses all smelled different to her. “I would know if someone’s diabetes was going off," she told UK-based newspaper The Telegraph.
That’s an everyday reality for Joy Milne, a Scottish woman who claims she can sniff out the condition’s telltale scent long before the symptoms appear. The 75-year-old former nurse told The ...
Joy Milne told Sky's The UK Tonight With Sarah-Jane Mee about how her rare condition of hyperosmia, an incredibly sensitive sense of smell, helped her sniff out the disease in her late husband ...