Kitty put me in touch with University Provost Patrick Rivington, Stutts’ head honcho for anything having to do with dollars and cents. “Our students are our customers, Mike,” Rivington explained. “Whatever they want to learn, we want to teach. When a consultant told me that our students spent, on average, 17% of their entire Stutts career cheating their brains out, the next step was obvious: let’s turn it into a major. That’s what being customer-focused is.” When I mentioned that other schools might disagree, Rivington said, "Other schools' opinions don't really concern us."
The Alternative Moralities (“AltMo”) major was instituted at Stutts four years ago, but it’s already one of the most visible, powerful departments on campus. Though it started out as a branch of the Philosophy department, its wild popularity with the students—along with some Machievellian dealings by the AltMo professors themselves—soon made it one of the most voices inside Stutts. Proof of this came on April 23, 2003, when CHEATSTAR-1, the first-ever satellite dedicated solely to academic malfeasance, was lifted into geosynchronous orbit.
Naturally, there’s been a tremendous amount of interest in AltMo coming from the business world, and where corporations go, money inevitably follows. In July, Stutts will unveil the 30,000-square foot Wouk Center for Competitive Advantages, paid for by Kenneth Wouk ’67, CEO of Energon. According to a press release, Wouk’s first priority is to “develop a new version of the artificial intelligence software that allowed Energon to manipulate the world’s electricity supply so very effectively. My second priority is not to get caught this time.”
“‘Kenny Kilowatt’ is a full-stop, flat-out genius,” Rivington told me. “He’s already talking to the Physics department about quantum cheating technology. That’s going to make it possible for Stutts students to cheat on multiple tests at the same time. It’s a really exciting time,” Rivington said. “Money’s just pouring into the Center, because it’s a great way to hide your profits. We can’t wait for Kenny to come onboard,” Rivington said. “Three-to-seven years max, less with good behavior.”
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