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Volume 17 Issue 25

Inside: A Focus On Unique Holiday Gift Ideas! See Magazine Section!

December 11, 2009

The Direct-Mail Newspaper Serving New Tampa & Wesley Chapel Since 1993! THIS INDEPENDENT COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER IS DIRECTLY MAILED TO: NEW TAMPA: Arbor Greene • Cory Lake Isles • Cross Creek • Grand Hampton • Heritage Isles • Hunter’s Green • Hunter’s Key • K-Bar Ranch • Lake Forest • Live Oak Preserve • Pebble Creek • Richmond Place • Tampa Palms • West Meadows WESLEY CHAPEL: Aberdeen • Belle Chase • Brookside • Chapel Pines • Country Walk • Lexington Oaks • Meadow Pointe • New River • Northwood • Pinewalk • Pine Ridge • Saddlebrook • Saddleridge Estates • Saddlewood • Seven Oaks • Lakes at Northwood • The Villages of Wesley Chapel • Wesley Pointe • Westbrook Estates • Williamsburg

Celebrating The Spirit Of Giving This Holiday Season By Michael Smith

Students Raise Money, Food For Thanksgiving Donation

The holidays are a time for being with family and friends, giving and sharing and being thankful for all of the blessings that we enjoy every day. But, it’s also a time for us to remember those who are less fortunate than ourselves and to do what we can to share the spirit of the holidays with them. This year, with the struggling U.S. economy and record-high levels of unemployment, there are even more people than usual who are in need of assistance. Metropolitan Ministries, which provides food, clothing and other services for the poor and homeless throughout the Tampa Bay area, reports that it is preparing to help more than 29,000 families this month, an 18percent increase over the 24,000-plus families who received assistance during the holidays last year. And, with the level of donations declining along with the poor economy, the organization needs all the help it can get.

It’s not as hard as you might think to make a difference in the life of a needy family. Just ask the students at New Tampa’s Primrose Schools (located on Primrose Lake Circle in Tampa Palms and on Cross Creek Blvd.), who joined in a nationwide effort to collect food for needy families this Thanksgiving. According to local franchise owner Sonya Boyette, students at the more than 200 Primrose Schools around the country began collecting food for the drive in October, but many went beyond simply bringing in items from their parents’ cupboards. “The students also earned money by completing extra chores at home,” Boyette says. “They pooled their earnings and counted it in the classroom.” She says that the students then reviewed grocery store ads to find the best values for their money, compiled shopping lists of the healthiest foods

By Michael Smith

needed to bring him back was, thankfully, just around the corner. Williams is a junior at Wharton High School, where, for the past two years, he has been a member of both the school’s varsity basketball and football teams. On November 14, Williams and his teammates on the Wildcats basketball team were in the midst of practices for the new season when the 6’-

Primrose School students (l.-r.) Mackenzie Cash, Sarah Keith, Hannah Furniss, Andrew Ruiz and Joshua Aldahondo add to the school’s food drive collection. and then took a field trip to a local grocery store to shop for the items on their lists. As a result, on November 10, they presented nearly 700 pounds of food items to Metropolitan Ministries. Boyette says that incorporating the food drive activities into classroom projects did more than just help the local

schools’ 400 pre-kindergarten, kindergarten and first-grade students learn about subjects like math and health, it also helped teach them how to be better citizens. “Giving back to the community is a major focus of the annual food drive, as well as a key component of Primrose Schools’ ‘Balanced Learning’ curriculum, which blends teacher-directed and child-initiated activities with a special emphasis on character development,” Boyette says. For Christmas, the students are working on a project that is a little more personal. They have adopted a pair of soldiers, one who is stationed in Iraq and the other in Korea, and are putting together care packages for each, with candy, other gifts and handmade cards created by the students.

Help The Poor & Homeless While the Primrose students are See “Giving” on page 14.

Timely Intervention Brings Wharton Star Back To Life

Charges Dropped Against Gun-Wielding Homeowner, A Jam-Packed Community Calendar, Meet The New Freedom High Basketball Coaches & More!

Explore The Healing Power Of Massage, Some Outside-The-Box Holiday Gift Ideas, Results Of Our Annual Dining Survey & Contest & More!

See pages 3-30!

See pages 31-52!

See “Intervention” on page 6.

ECRWSS

NEIGHBORHOOD MAGAZINE!

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LOCAL NEWS, BUSINESS, SPORTS & EDUCATION

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Also Inside This Issue!

Rescue (TFR) Station #21 on Cross Creek Blvd., along with another firefighter, 28-year veteran Capt. Rick Chesser, all of whom just happened to be at the high school to deliver equipment for that evening’s annual charity Badge Bowl game between TFR’s firefighters and members of the Tampa Police Department (TPD). Bradford and Santos entered the gym just as Tonelli was about to use the portable defibrillator on Williams, who was still lifeless and beginning to turn blue, so they took over and were quickly able to get his heart beating again. In

Dated Material Please Rush!

They say that when it’s your time to go, then it’s your time to go, and there’s nothing you can do about it. But, apparently Fate has other plans for Drake Williams, because even though the 16-year-old two-sport athlete suffered a collapse last month that actually ended his life, the help he

4”, 213-pound student-athlete suddenly fell to the floor of the school gymnasium, unconscious. Immediately, Wharton head basketball coach Tommy Tonelli came to Williams’ aid. He checked for a pulse, but there wasn’t one, and Williams wasn’t breathing either. So, Tonelli started performing CPR, but after getting no response, he directed one of the other students to continue doing CPR while he ran to get the portable defibrillator that is kept in the school’s gymnasium in case of cardiac emergencies. On the way, he handed his cell phone to another student so he could call 911. When that student went outside to try to get better reception on the phone, however, he looked up and right there were paramedics Ryan Bradford and Angelo Santos of Tampa Fire

For Advertising Information Call 813-910-2575 • Volume 17, Issue 25 • December 11, 2009 • www.NTNeighborhoodNews.com

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