Zenâs Toyland has opened on the north side of S.R. 56, in the former location of Mattress One, between Mellow Mushroom and Chuyâs Tex-Mex.Â
This is the third Zenâs Toyland location, as the same owner has stores in Connecticut and Massachusetts.
The large toy store has a great selection of fun and educational toys and games, everything from Globber scooters, Brio train sets and Wild Republic plush animals to Schleich dinosaur figures (photo above), Lego blocks, Green Toys trucks and âBubble Globâ NeeDoh and so much more.
And, if you join the Zenâs Toyland Loyalty Program, youâll get $10 off every $100 you spend in the store!
Zenâs Toyland is open every day except Sunday from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. (until 7 p.m. on Thurs. & Fri.). For more information, call (813) 949-5111, visit ZensToyalnd.comÂ
Check out some of the latest KRATEs
Brew Bar La Creacion Express
Although, as we’ve been telling you, several additional former shipping containers at the KRATE Container Park are likely to open before the June 4 Grand Opening event, a couple of additional KRATEs have opened since our last issue.
I am definitely impressed with both the food and the desserts at the new La Creacion Express, which has a larger original bakery location on W. Hillsborough Ave. in Tampa. The Puerto Rican cuisine items include the Tripleta sandwich (with pork, ham and steak, American cheese and mayoketchup) and tender chicken or pork skewers (I ordered the zesty barbecue sauce on the side). La Creacion also offers a variety of empanadas (beef, chicken, pizza, octopus & shrimp), as well as desserts called quesitos (flaky pastry stuffed with cream cheese). Finish it all off with a Puerto Rican Medalla Light beer. For more info, call (813) 528-8163.
Speaking of great beers, the new Brew Bar at the KRATEs is a self-pour tap room with a rotating variety of 21 beers on tap, including locals like Big Storm Brewing Oatmeal Stout, and Tampa Bay Brewing Co. Reef Donkey, plus favorites like Stella Artois and Blue Moon, hard ciders, prosecco, red sangria, moscato and more.
For more information, visit âBrew Bar Wesley Chapelâ on Facebook. â GN
The pressure for many high school valedictorians can be stifling. While mostly grateful for finishing at the top of their respective classes, the journey is usually one that provides them with a sense of relief when they graduate.
But, Freedom High Class of 2022 valedictorian Pascale Carvalho says that, for her, there never was any pressure. She loved the journey. And, she has made putting in a ton of hours to earn her Associate of Arts (A.A.) degree from Hillsborough Community College and compiling an 8.5 high school grade point average actually sound, well, fun.
âI was never aiming for a certain spot,â Pascale says. âIt was never motivation to do better in school. It was just a perk.â
From the very start of high school, which officially ends with graduation Thursday morning at 8 a.m. at the Florida State Fairgrounds, Pascale made sure to take classes she would enjoy, not just classes that would beef up her GPA.Â
Her freshman year, she took music theory because despite already playing the guitar (jazz fusion and rock) and cello â and cymbals in the high school band â she wanted to learn how to read music, too. And now, she writes her own music as well.
âIt was an irreplaceable experience,â she says.
As a sophomore, Pascale took a heavy load of dual enrollment classes, because one of her major goals was to earn her A.A. degree prior to actually starting college. Her junior year, she took Japanese at the University of South Florida, because she had an interest in that culture and language.
Her senior year, Pascale took a pair of 4000-level health science classes at USF, another strong area of interest for her. She wasnât sure what she wanted to do in college prior to her senior year, but her wide range of interests and classes has helped clarify that vision.
While undecided on which college she will attend, she is mulling over acceptance letters from the University of Southern California at Los Angeles, for its outstanding music composition programs, or Brown University in Providence, RI, or Washington University in St. Louis, for health sciences.
âMy goal was just to give myself the best possible education I could, and provide myself with the best college opportunities, and thatâs what I did,â she says.
The groundwork for a successful high school experience was laid by her family. Her parents Chantal and Daniel stressed education â Pascale laughs at the math books and essays Chantal assigned during the summer â and older brother Antoine, a Freedom grad, is at Boston University, while older sister Dominique recently graduated from USF after studying biological health science.
âThey definitely emphasized being good at what you do,â Pascale says. âIf you do anything, try to be the best at it.â
Pascale also strove to be her best, but was never consumed with her academic standing. âBeing No. 1 is just one of those hoops you go through,â she says. âOnce you reach it, (you should) look back, and see if your experience equates to that number. Because it should.â
Pascaleâs high school experience also included athletics. While she couldnât compete her sophomore and junior years due to an undiagnosed neurological problem, she still managed to play two seasons of soccer and, as a senior, was on the swimming and cross country teams.
While she ponders college, Pascale spends her spare time with friends, watching anime and playing her guitar.
But if you ask her to play a tune, donât expect a rendition of âSweet Home Alabama.â She didnât take music theory and Japanese for nothing.
âWell, I like a lot of Japanese music,â she says, laughing, âso itâs probably going to be a random Japanese heavy metal song that nobodyâs ever heard.â
When Sonya Patel walks across the stage as Wharton Highâs Class of 2022 valedictorian during the schoolâs graduation ceremony on May 25, she will do so with its highest-ever GPA â 9.40.
Sonya didnât set out to break any records. In fact, being valedictorian wasnât even her goal.
âBut,â she says, âI did want to push myself to do my very best.â
She wanted to learn as much as she could and take advantage of every opportunity placed in front of her. Her incredible work ethic led her to set that new high mark for future Wharton students to aspire to beat.
Sonya spent all of her school years in New Tampa, starting at Pride Elementary and going to Benito Middle School before attending Wharton.
When she graduates, sheâll stay close to home. She plans to attend the University of South Florida in Tampa and major in biomedical sciences on her way to a career as a doctor.
âI plan to apply to medical school in the future,â Sonya says. âI currently have fields that interest me but Iâm keeping an open mind about what I actually want to do in the medical field.â
When she started high school, Sonya wasnât sure she wanted to be a doctor. She signed up for dual enrollment (DE) classes at Hillsborough Community College that sounded interesting, and the more classes she took in the medical field, the more she became sure she wanted to one day help people in that way.
While those dual enrollment classes helped her solidify her future plans, along with a lot of Advanced Placement (AP) classes, they also helped her earn that sky-high GPA.
âI counted at least 15 science classes that sheâs taken, and it blew me away,â says Christi Atkinson, who is Sonyaâs Marine Science teacher this year. âShe takes on so many activities and is capable of managing her time and getting everything done. Itâs amazing.â
Knowing itâs a long journey through med school and residency, Sonyaâs AP and DE classes will help her get her undergraduate requirements out of the way, and because sheâs a high school student, the classes have been free.
âIt seemed a great way to work on my future goals,â she says, earning credits toward her undergraduate degree while learning about what she calls âcool subjects.â
While sheâs worked hard in school, she enjoys spending her free time painting, doing henna body art and cooking. She says her most fun class has been orchestra, where she plays the cello.
Her orchestra teacher, Elise Prather, says, âShe has been a dream student. She is respectful, kind, communicates effectively, is a great team player, gives 110% on everything, and is very helpful to me and other students.â
While Sonya was accepted to several schools, she decided USF was the most convenient and least expensive choice.
âAnd it has great opportunities, so Iâm not missing out,â she says.
When she graduates from high school, Sonya will have earned 62 credit hours from Hillsborough Community College, plus many hours from her AP classes, which will help her fulfill her college general education credits. She hopes to finish her Bachelor of Science degree at USF within two years.
She says she loves volunteering, especially at the local Bay Chapel food pantry, because she appreciates that her community has a local food pantry to help those who need some help.
In addition to her difficult academics, orchestra and volunteering, she also serves as co-president of Whartonâs Mu Alpha Theta National Math Honor Society club, secretary of the Science National Honor Society and orchestra clubs, and is a member of the schoolâs National Beta Club and National Honor Society.
âSheâs just a really good kid,â Atkinson says. âSheâs someone you can rely on and depend on.â
And while Sonya and her peers dealt with a lot of adversity due to Covid-19, Atkinson adds, âshe adapted very well and rose above the challenges.â
Thatâs what Sonya intends to do in the future, too. Sheâll keep setting goals, working hard, making practical decisions, and taking the next step forward.
As she moves from one chapter of her life to the next, she says, âIâm looking forward to new experiences, whatever they may be.â
Sand Pine Elementary second grade teacher Corinne Staney is retiring after 53 years as an elementary school educator. (Photos: Charmaine George)
Second-grade teacher Corinne Staney has retired once before, in 2005, before moving to Wesley Chapel.
But this time, she says, after 53 years in education â including the last 15 at Sand Pine Elementary â itâs for good.
âI promised my granddaughter this would be the last year,â Staney says. âIâm looking forward to spending time with my family, thatâs really important, and nowâs the time.â
May 27 will be the last day of school for Staney, 75, who lives in Meadow Pointe with her husband Joseph, a retired educator who spent 36 years as an administrator and coach. She has left a lasting legacy that will be hard to replace.
âItâs going to be a huge loss for us,â says Sand Pine principal Christina Twardosz, âbut we are super excited for her to be able to spend some time spoiling herself.â
Twardosz says if anyone deserves it, it is Staney, who is always one of the first to arrive and among the last to leave every day at Sand Pine.
What will Staney do on May 28, her first day as a retiree? Sheâs going to start off with a book to read just for enjoyment, for the first time in forever. She may work on her cooking and rediscover a few hobbies. Michaels is her favorite store, so maybe a little crafting here and there. And, she has a daughter, Lisa Couture, and a son, Tim, as well as grandkids Dom, Ryan and Maddy, and of course, her husband to keep her days filled.
Her family may want to keep her away from tutoring or volunteering at any schools, however. When she retired the last time, it was a tutoring gig that led to a year of being a preschool teacher that then led to her applying for an opening at Sand Pine.
Teaching, she says, is in her blood. Her grandmother taught in a one-room schoolhouse, and because her parents â her dad managed a meat department in a grocery story and her mom had to turn down a scholarship and became an executive secretary â couldnât go to college because they had to work during World War II, they emphasized the importance of education to their daughter.
Staney cut her teaching teeth in Worcester, MA, at a number of different schools, always in grades K-5. She was active in the teacherâs union, joined a group of education researchers at nearby Clark University, absorbed herself into the field of teaching and eventually âretiredâ to Florida.
But, she says she was called back to the classroom, as retirement turned into more of a very short sabbatical.
âI was boredâŠand I just love what I do,â Stanley says. âI love working with kids, I love learning new things, I love having a job that makes you want to get up in the morning and go. Kids are phenomenal. Every year is a fresh new start, a chance to be better, and a chance to be a part of a group of people that want to teach and learn. Itâs fantastic.â
Staney says teaching wonât make you rich, but if you can find joy in it, it can make you happy.
âHer love and joy for children is inspiring,â says Twardosz.
As this issue is reaching your mailbox, thereâs still a few days of classes left, and Staney plans to enjoy every minute of whatâs left. She has given away many of her books, to a new teacher and another who teaches children with special needs, and her Christmas tree. Her most prized teaching possession â a ceramic apple that she was given by her fellow teachers to mark her 50th year as a teacher â will be displayed at home.
She could, quite honestly, teach forever, and thatâs why, some days, as her final year as a teacher winds down, she has to hold back the tears.
âI didnât cry until I thought about all of the years and all of the kids,â Corinne says. âBut every year when school is ending I have a hard time.â
When she closes her eyes, she says she can still see her first class in 1969 at Woodland Street School in Worcester, and most of her classes since.
But, she says her last class may just be her most special one.
âAll of them were adorable,â Stanley says. âI just look at their faces and have such high hopes for them. They clap for each other, encourage each other, all for one and one for all. The future looks pretty bright if you just look at the kidsâ faces.â
Attorney Derek Usman, who has an office on BBD Blvd. in New Tampa, has opened a second location in downtown Tampa to be closer to the courts. (Photo courtesy of Derek Usman)
Attorney Derek Usman says a piece of advice in a self-improvement book stuck with him and has become a cornerstone of how he practices law.
âI treat each case like itâs the most important case,â he says. âI approach each of them in the same manner, whether itâs a small claims case or a filing for the Supreme Court.â
This philosophy has helped his New Tampa-based business, The Usman Law Firm, P.A. â located in the Central Bank building on Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. south of County Line Rd. â to grow through referrals and word-of-mouth among clients who need legal expertise for litigation, employment law and business law.
He established his firm in the community where he lives, knowing that many residents of our area may need an employment or business law firm, and may want to work with someone who is a part of their community.
âNew Tampa- and Wesley Chapel-area residents are business owners and employees, and executives of businesses,â says Usman, âsometimes they are people who work for corporations that are relocating to the Tampa Bay area. They have a local resource right here. They donât have to go to a big downtown firm.â
But, if they do want a downtown firm, Usman has that covered, too. He recently opened a second office in downtown Tampa to have more accessibility to the courts and to court personnel.
âLawsuits always involve two sides,â he says, âand oftentimes, the opposing counsel is downtown.â
He says maintaining a second office in the heart of where most litigation happens allows him to communicate better with opposing counsel, while keeping his New Tampa office as his primary work location.
âAttorneys are fraternal,â he says. âIt makes it easier to talk with them because you have a connection and a familiarity. A personal relationship makes things smoother.â
He values those personal relationships, which is why he always gives his full attention and diligent preparation to every case that comes before him. A client he helped with one of those âsmall casesâ came back to him when something much bigger came up. This led to Usman recently filing a federal case on behalf of a St. Petersburg-based startup company, called Priatek, alleging its former executives stole technology and forced out the companyâs president.
He says he was hired to represent that firm because one of its investors appreciated the way Usman treated his earlier case.
âThat was a small claims trial, with a low dollar amount, but he knew that I prepared well,â says Usman.
And, Usman adds, he had no expectation that one case would lead to a bigger one, but that he treats everyone the same, across the board. He works hard to ensure each of his clients is represented well, no matter how minor their complaint may seem.
Happy Clients…
Jerry Newberry is a client who says he experienced that quality representation first-hand. As president of a local company, he was looking for an attorney to review some corporate documents he had prepared.
After finding Usman by searching online, Newberry says he was able to get an appointment quickly, go over his questions, and that Usman got back to him with all of his questions answered in just a few days.
âI was really happy,â Newberry says. âI had a bunch of questions because I donât understand legal mumbo jumbo, and he answered all of them. I appreciated his timeliness and his feedback was very thorough.â
Plus, Newberry says he has worked with several lawyers who run up costs very quickly, but notes that Usmanâs fees were very reasonable.
âIâve dealt with 30 to 40 attorneys over 30 years, and he was painless,â says Newberry. âHe was very willing to do whatever I needed, and he explained everything in a way that I understood and felt comfortable (with). Iâm definitely pleased and will certainly use him again.â
Usman says he understands that litigation can be expensive and that a lot of the expense is hard costs, such as court fees, that clients have to pay.
He emphasizes thatâs why he has multiple fee arrangements to meet each clientâs needs. Fees can be paid as contingent, fixed or hourly billing.
âI work with clients on payment options,â he says. âEven though litigation is a costly endeavor, I donât want that to deter you from pursuing actions on your behalf.â
Derek says many attorneys who practice business and employment law specialize in either initial transactions or disputes. However, Derek isnât limited to only one area or the other.
He says his clients benefit from the hands-on experience he has had in courtrooms, from county courts, to state, federal and even appellate courts. Because he sees how litigation plays out in court, he knows the pitfalls to look out for in drafting agreements and other documentation.
âI know both parts and have experience in both,â he says. âI have more practical knowledge when it comes to forming agreements because I know what usually gets litigated in court.â
After moving from Chicago to Wesley Chapel in 2015 to be closer to family, Derek opened his local office of The Usman Law Firm off of Bearss Ave. In 2018, he moved to his current office on BBD to be right in the heart of the community where he lives and serves his neighbors.
Derek earned a Bachelor of Science (B.S.) degree from Indiana University in Fort Wayne in 1997 and his Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree from the Northern Illinois University College of Law in 2001.
He is admitted to practice before the bars of Florida, Illinois, the U.S. Tax Court, U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida and U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.
Derek volunteers his time as part of the network of attorneys who work on both local and national cases with Alliance Defending Freedom, a faith-based nonprofit that focuses on legal advocacy.
The Usman Law Firm is located at 20701 Bruce B. Downs Blvd. For more information, please visit UsmanFirm.com or call (813) 377-1197.