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Washington and Lee Team Wins 20th-Annual VFIC Ethics Bowl The two-day event focused on ethics and social justice issues.

Ethics-Pic1 Washington and Lee Team Wins 20th-Annual VFIC Ethics BowlLeft to right, bottom row: Alex Farley, Allie Rutledge, Clare Perry. Top row: Melina Bell, Kushali Kumar, Cat Spencer, Chad Thomas.

Washington and Lee University won the 20th-annual Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges Ethics Bowl championship Feb. 10-11, when its six-member student team successfully devised and presented solutions to ethical dilemmas.

The members of the W&L student team were Alex Farley ’19, a senior majoring in economics and philosophy; Allie Rutledge ’19, a senior majoring in neuroscience and philosophy; Cat Spencer ’20, a junior majoring in politics; Clare Perry ’21, a sophomore majoring in history and philosophy; and Charles Thomas ’21, a sophomore majoring in mathematics and philosophy. Accompanying the team as an alternate was Kushali Kumar ’22. The faculty coordinator for the team was Melina Bell, W&L professor of philosophy and law.

The Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges (VFIC) and Wells Fargo sponsored the annual Ethics Bowl, now in its 20th year, at Roanoke College in Salem. VFIC is a nonprofit, fund-raising partnership supporting the programs and students of 15 leading private colleges and universities in the commonwealth.

The two-day event focused on ethics and social justice issues. The case study in the final round involved whether a women’s shelter worker should, ethically speaking, allow a transgender woman to stay in the shelter for the night. The hypothetical woman’s driver’s license recorded that she was male (the sex assigned to her at birth), which was how the worker discovered she was transgender. No law governed the matter, but it was an unwritten policy that shelters in the area were to admit people based on their sex assigned at birth. The woman seeking shelter indicated that she would feel unsafe in a men’s shelter. W&L argued that the woman should be admitted to the women’s shelter, and that the worker should attempt to have a trans-inclusive policy instituted at the shelter.

Professionals from business, law, education, finance, journalism and other fields listened to team presentations and offered reactions to the students’ presentations.

“Judges commented that W&L’s ethical arguments were crisp and persuasive, and their delivery polished and remarkably well-coordinated,” said Bell. “It takes a lot of talent and practice to develop principled, convincing arguments in a few minutes, and to deliver them confidently and eloquently in front of judges and an audience. I couldn’t be more proud of the team!”