Yes, very much like your choice of the rasboras (my group continues to look beautiful and are entertaining) and neons (have a group of those too!) I've decided rasboras are even more hardy than zebra danios and are a great fish for beginners and also a great first introduction to a tank right after the fishless cycle. The neons can be hardy fish too, its just a very true observation that you will have a much higher percentage of them -get- to that hardy stage if you simply wait 6 months before introducing them -- for them, there's something else going on in a new tank and they need that. But their electric color is well worth the wait!
I also like lots of other tetras.. penguins and scissors (as you mention) (but check if you have enough stocking space on your list as I can't remember the mature lengths they get too and what their minimum shoal sizes are. Note that these two things, final mature size and minimum shoaling size are the two pieces of data you have to be constantly seeking as part of your homework on your stocking list. Glowlight and head&taillight tetras are also nice. Panda corys are sensitive I believe, so you might want to study up on this and decide if they're not the best choice for your first year, not sure. Agree with Andy, there are a ton of other cory types out there. Don't worry about losing the barbs off your list, lots of beginners have tigers, for instance, on their list because they are so strikingly colored, but the are fast, rough and mean, sometimes even when you've met the minimum shoal (and if you do meet that minimum you've got a potentially too active tank. What barbs really need is to be among the smaller sized fish in a huge tank that has plenty of fish bigger than they are! Agree, tank too small for angels.
~~waterdrop~~