Archive
New Baked Potato Takeaway Outlet Opening In Dunedin
Posted 3:59pm Sunday 16th May 2021 by Denzel Chung
A new takeaway outlet will soon be opening on George Street, dedicated to that unsung hero of foods: Baked potatoes. Facebook and Instagram pages for Patate were launched last Thursday, with owner Aysu Shahin announcing they will “open very soon” at 420 George Street (nice), Read more...
There Is A Decomposing Lobster on Great King Street
Posted 3:58pm Sunday 16th May 2021 by Asia Martusia King
Around three weeks ago, a lobster appeared on Great King Street. Annabelle, a resident of Great King Street, was leaving her flat one morning when she started smelling “the salty sea air”. “I thought it was odd because you usually smell either exhaust or Maccas,” she Read more...
Uni Begs Council to Actually Do Tertiary Precinct Upgrade
Posted 3:55pm Sunday 16th May 2021 by Alex Leckie-Zaharic
The DCC stood remarkably stone-faced last week as the University effectively got on their knees and begged for them to stop taking infrastructure funding away from the tertiary precinct. The DCC has delayed the tertiary precinct upgrade. The plan has gone from $20 million over the next few Read more...
Ooh Look How Fancy OUSA Are, Now They Have An Advisory Board
Posted 3:53pm Sunday 16th May 2021 by Erin Gourley
OUSA are paying some fancy businesspeople to help them make commercial decisions on a newly created Advisory Board. The Board will meet bimonthly with OUSA to discuss commercial decisions and the direction of OUSA, as well as keeping in regular contact with the Exec and the CEO. There will be up Read more...
Students Ignored at Parliamentary Inquiry into Student Accommodation
Posted 3:50pm Sunday 16th May 2021 by Denzel Chung
The final report of the Parliamentary Inquiry into Student Accommodation, meant to uphold standards at halls, has been slammed by the New Zealand Union of Students’ Associations (NZUSA), with President Andrew Lessells claiming it “ignores the voice of students.” The Inquiry was Read more...
Te Ao Māori Becomes Compulsory In Law Degrees
Posted 3:47pm Sunday 16th May 2021 by Erin Gourley
Tikanga and te ao Māori will now be taught in all of the core papers of a law degree, after a unanimous vote on Friday 7 May by the Council of Legal Education. The Council of Legal Education sets the requirements for all LLB courses in Aotearoa. President of Te Roopū Whai Read more...
Government Providing 400 MIQ Spots for International Students in June
Posted 3:45pm Sunday 16th May 2021 by Elliot Weir
More international students will be able to come to Otago Uni from June, with 400 spots in MIQ set aside for international students. The New Zealand International Students’ Association welcomed the news and said that the “lack of MIQ spaces has been a long-standing problem for Read more...
Manager “Oblivious” to Supermarket Workers’ Concerns Following Stabbing
Posted 2:41pm Tuesday 11th May 2021 by Erin Gourley
Clarification: the photo above this article is not an indication of which supermarket is involved. Rather than offering support to employees after yesterday’s stabbing at Countdown, another Dunedin supermarket asked workers for extra shifts because the supermarket would be Read more...
Consequences of Bitcoin Debated
Posted 3:02pm Sunday 9th May 2021 by Quintin Jane
You can buy a Tesla with it, and you can evade the feds with it, but recent reports from Cambridge University show that bitcoin mining consumes more power than the entire country Argentina, and accounts for nearly 1% of global power consumption. Actual, physical mining accounts for 4–7% of Read more...
There’s Asbestos in the Biochem Building
Posted 2:58pm Sunday 9th May 2021 by Alex Leckie-Zaharic
A routine story about the University proactively clearing away asbestos from an old building as part of an upgrade took an unexpected turn when the University sent mixed messages. An earlier statement sent to Critic Te Arohi said that only the safer, “non-friable” form of Read more...

