The comforting smell of soup wafted on a late spring breeze, blending with the initial notes of the Farragut Middle School orchestra’s rendition of, “I Can’t Help Falling in Love with You.” The sounds and smells provided a fitting escort into The Commons at Farragut High School, where the Shared Visions Art Show and the Empty Bowls initiative joined forces with FMS orchestra and Farragut High School jazz band on Thursday, April 9. The cornucopia of fine arts activities weaved together for the third consecutive year, drawing quite a crowd as visitors filtered in through the sun-dappled glass. The Empty Bowls aspect featured soup dinners — with choices of potato, chicken and rice or broccoli and cheese — which were available with a drink, bread and dessert for just $15 per meal. Any meal purchase went toward FISH Hospitality Pantries, whose representative noted that just one $5 donation provides 20 pounds of food. So each $15 meal would feed three families, continuing a fundraising tradition that has dated back several years at FHS. Last year alone, the fundraiser brought in $4,700, which fed 940 families. But it also reinforced a sense of community, as FHS students worked the event. “It teaches them a lot of life lessons that they can carry with them,” FHS Visual Arts teacher Angela McCarter said. “The Empty Bowls event is completely run by the students. They are the servers, ticket sellers, and they made the bowls. To have them understand how they can work together to achieve a common goal is an important lesson.”
Read MoreKisha Durst still remembers the moment everything clicked. The year was 2009, and Durst was in her third season with a Hard Knox Roller Derby team, which was still in its infancy. Her own knowledge of the sport remained limited at that point. During bouts, opponents and teammates flew by — nothing more than a blur of helmets, knee pads, glitter and black lipstick. Then, in the snap of a finger, everything clicked. “It was like someone flipped a switch,” Durst recalled 17 years later, “and everything slowed down to a normal pace. It all made sense, and I could see and understand what was happening.” Fast-forward almost two decades, and Durst — a Farragut resident since 2019 — has become a crucial piece of the Hard Knox league in a sport still relatively new to the region. “I am an OG [Original Gangster], yes,” joked Durst, who works as a guest experience coordinator for BlackBerry Farm during the week. But once Durst clocks out of her daily job and straps on her multicolored helmet, she transforms into her alter-ego, “Bushwacker.” “Roller derby is basically my second job,” she said during a bout on Saturday, April 4. “I’m head of training and a coach and captain of the All-Stars. So it’s my second, non-paying job.”
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