DAILY LIFE

Audrey Weston, 74, throws her head back laughing as she holds on to the side of the swimming pool trying to remember the “Four Ts” — tuck the tummy and tighten the tush.Comedic banter flies through the air as 19 bodies submerge in the water.“Are we actually supposed to have stomach muscles?”“You’re supposed to pretend to pull your bellybutton to your backbone.”“What bellybutton? I haven’t seen that in a long time.”They are called Cherry’s Blossoms and they take a water aerobics class taught by instructor Cherry Hammer twice a week at the Naples/Marco Island KOA Campground in East Naples. The participants are residents in the park who spend their winters in Naples to escape the cold of the north.
  
Richard Fahey, a resident of Naples Land Yacht Harbor mobile home park, rides a bike dressed as the devil in the park's annual Mardi Gras-style parade with a theme called "Parade of Songs," which featured about 30 floats and participants dressed up as different songs. Fahey was dressed as the song "Devil in the Deep Blue Sea."
  
Sister Maria Frassati, left, runs to grab a basketball as Victor Velasquez shoots the ball while other students cheer him on during recess at Ave Maria Grammar and Preparatory School. "It's really special to be able to teach as a sister," says Frassati. "Even my students had a sense that a sister kind of belongs to them in a way that their lay teachers don't."
     
  
Gov. Rick Scott, Florida's 45th governor, waves to the crowd as he is followed down Monroe Street by a throng of media during his inauguration parade Tuesday, January 4, 2011 in Tallahassee.
  
Atedra Elliton, 20, a first-time mother, has her first ultrasound in Florida City, Fla.
  
Jesula Thebaud, 55, cries after her  grandson, Adji Desir, went missing while under her supervision in Farm Worker Village in Immokalee, Fla. Desir, 6, was reported missing the night of Saturday, January 10, 2009. He was last seen around 5:15 p.m. outside of Thebaud's home.
     
  
Savannah, Ga.
  
Members of Tabernaculo de Alabanza pray during worship service Sunday evening at First Presbyterian Church of Bonita Springs. First Presbyterian opened its doors to Tabernaculo to hold services Sunday evenings for six weeks. Tabernaculo's church in Bonita Springs was destroyed in a fire.
  
Mike Manning, an assistant coach for the Naples Rockets 9-and 10-year-old softball team, hugs his daughter, Taylor, who is a pitcher from the team, after the team lost the state championship. Manning often sounded like a drill sergeant, commanding respect with the tone of his voice. The moment Taylor's team lost, Manning's persona went from being a coach and drill sergeant, to a father.
     
  
German Lopez, 6, waits in the car for his father after spending the day moving belongings from their home in Glade Haven trailer park in Bonita Springs, Fla. The park's residents have been given notice to leave the park to make way for a 200-unit condominium complex.
  
Rosemada Petion, 16, right, makes her way in to the Gulf of Mexico as Eunice Paul, 16, left, walks out after being baptized by her father Jean Paul, center, the pastor for Naples New Haitian Church of the Nazarene. The two girls were among eight members of the church to be baptized just after an Easter sunrise service at the Naples Pier.
  
Ashya Samuel, 19, a trombone player with the Florida A&M University marching band, practices on their campus in Tallahassee in preparation of the inauguration parade for Florida Governor Rick Scott.
     
  
Jim Brennan, a Korean War veteran in the United States Navy between 1950-1954, can tell the history of his life with the tattoos on his body.
  
Anna Spencer, 18, first-time voter in the 2008 presidential election.
  
The name on the cross says Lee Bumrok and his age has been worn thin. Strangers passing by Arlington South on Naples beach didn’t know anything about him accept that he was a casualty of war. But, a simple internet search will reveal the name on the cross is wrong. His name is Bumrock Lee and he moved to the United States with his family from South Korea when he was 4 years old. He grew up in Cupertino, just outside of San Jose, Calif. He died at age 21 on June 2, 2004 after suffering injuries from a car-bomb in Iraq while serving as a corporal in the U.S. Marines Corps. He is one of more than 4,000 military men and women who have died in the war in Iraq.
     
  
Naples resident Matt Nickell, 38, works on the shape of one of his Irie Surfboards in his work space in North Naples. Nickell has been making surfboards since 1992 when he apprenticed for about a year with, then resident, Mauricio Gil.
  
Mesac Damas sits in the back of a police vehicle on the tarmac of the airport in Port-au-Prince, Haiti waiting to be extradited to the United States. Damas confessed to killing his wife, Guerline Dieu Damas and their five children in Naples, Fla. and was charged with six counts of first degree murder. After the slayings, Damas fled to Haiti where he was captured by Haitian police.
  
Friends and family mourn as the caskets of Guerline Dieu Damas and her five children — Meshach, 9, Maven, 6, Marven, 5, Megan, 3, and Morgan 19 months — are lowered in to the ground Saturday, October 3, 2009 at Palm Royale Cemetery in North Naples. Damas and her children were killed by her husband, Mesac Damas.