205:' Sunday Comment Front. Yamasaki had "spent 10 days talking to the prison warden, officials, guards and inmates." His writing focused on the inhumane conditions in which the inmates lived and the problems of overcrowding, violence and contraband. Against the prison's rules, Yamasaki was able to convince the guards not to escort him anywhere and gained permission to travel almost everywhere inside the prison entirely on his own. According to Yamasaki, the guards allowed him to do this because they wanted him to portray the great danger of their jobs as accurately as possible. Because Yamasaki traveled around the prison without guards, he was able to gain the trust of the inmates who confided things to him they otherwise would not have, in many cases, because they wanted him to portray the incredible danger and inhumanity of their lives as honestly as possible. Despite the danger he faced from the inmates without the protection of prison guards, Yamasaki was able to produce an in-depth investigative report which the
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Yamasaki dropped out of the
University of Michigan in the spring of his senior year and in April 1968 moved to New York City where he embarked on a string of jobs including assistant kindergarten teacher and assistant to fashion photographer
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Yamasaki's first marriage ended in divorce in 1974. He has one daughter from that marriage. He married his second and current wife, Susan
Waderlow, in 1978. Together, they have two boys. He has four grandchildren.
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Yamasaki has won numerous other awards for his photojournalism work. In 1999 and 2000, he was a
Distinguished Visiting Artist at The University of Michigan School of Art and Design.
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in
Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. When his younger brother built a darkroom in their mother's house, Yamasaki began to experiment with photography. Taro was admitted to the
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Taylor, Denny and Taro
Yamasaki. Penn GSE Perspectives on Urban Education | Volume 4, Issue 2 | Feature Articles | Children and Mass Trauma. Retrieved December 23, 2010.
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as a documentary photographer in migrant farm worker camps in western New York State where he realized that he wanted to pursue photography more seriously.
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and Teruko
Hirashiki in Detroit, Michigan. He is the second of three children. His father, an architect, is best known for designing the
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Elizabeth A. Brennan, Elizabeth C. Clarage. (Google eBook). page 209. Greenwood
Publishing Group. 1999. Retrieved December 23, 2010.
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Elizabeth A. Brennan, Elizabeth C. Clarage. (Google eBook). page 209. Greenwood
Publishing Group. 1999. Retrieved December 23, 2010
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to work on a book of architectural photography for
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where he majored in Journalism. He began taking photographs for the Journalism department's newspaper.
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Yamasaki has completed hundreds of human interest stories for Time Inc. magazines such as
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509:. Spina, Tony. Walter P. Reuther Library. April 27, 2010. Retrieved December 23, 2010.
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Penn GSE Perspectives on Urban Education Volume 4, Issue 2: Winter 2006 Biography.
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Baulch, Vivian M. The Detroit News August 14, 1998. Retrieved December 23, 2010.
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Baulch, Vivian M. Time Magazine. January 18, 1963. Retrieved December 23, 2010.
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Schulze, Franz. "Mariotti". Herring PRess. 1988. Retrieved December 23, 2010.
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Some of the topics his documentary photography work have covered are:
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magazine to travel to Wales to photograph the village in which
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In the summer of 1971, Yamasaki moved from New York city to
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