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         -  Lester,   
        here is a list  of  questions! Please  write as much as 
        you like  for each ! I will give you as much  space as 
        you need!
       
         
       
        1 - What material have you saved? 
        Papers, books, photos old  tty tools and hardware?  Any back
        issues of  GA-SK? 
        None! Gave up all of Items 
        to  NTID.  
       
         
       
        2 -  when did  you get 
        rid of  your old tty manuals  they  we have here? 
        ??
        1990
       
         
       
        3 -  Do you still fix  TTYs?  
        No!  Retired  21 
        years ago!
       
         
       
        4  - What  got you interested in repairing
        them?  We assume  you did  because of the manuals. 
        To serve the   Deaf
        Community in Rochester.
       
         
       
        5  - One  book  say inside
        of it  you were "AGENT  FOR TDI"  what 
        did that mean and what  duties were expected of  you!? 
        My duty was to provide obsolete
        TTYs to the users.
       
         
       
        6 -  Please tell us  about the 
        H. Latham Breunig Humanitarian Award in  1983 awarded to
         Lester Zimet  we saw the in the TDI website.  talk about
        the award,   what  you  did  to  earn this 
        recognition and  what  does  this award mean to you.
       
         
       
        It meant a lot to me for I volunteered 
        my free time to the Deaf community for 35 years.
       
         
       
         
       
        7 - What was  your  full time
        job?  was  that the TDI agent position or was there another 
        job?
       
         
       
         I was working for a Law
        Publishing company for 32 years.
        
  
       
         
       
        10 Did  you ever teach at any
        of the deaf  schools? 
       
         
       
        No!
         
 
         
       
        11. Where did  you  graduate 
        from,  were there other awards  you received  for 
        your  work?  
       
         
       
         Rochester School  for the
        Deaf and received awards from different organizations.
         
 
         
       
        12  feel  free to add
        anything...
       
         
       
        I Had some help from the Telephone and
        Western Union pioneers.
       
         
       
        I am now 84 1/2 years 
        old.  
       
         
       
        I worked on  Models 15, 28, 32,
        Lorenz, TDDs and Kleinschmidt machines.
       
         
       
 
 
     
 From
      the Matthew Starr Collection at SMECC Sally Taylor States -  "photo shows Lester Zimet most likely promoting TTYs at a Deaf Awareness event in Rochester.("Deaf Expo", most likely just local)"
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    | 
        Lester Zimet Installed the  TTY system
        here.=======================================
 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1979 OSWEGO VALLEY NEWS "The Paper That's
        Read from Cover to Cover"
 
         
       
        Link Fire Control To Homes of Deaf
          
 
          
              TELEPHONE HOOK-UP— Dispatcher Richard Cronk of
            Oswego County Fire Control demonstrates the telephone converter which enables the deaf families
            in Oswego County to communicate with Fire Control in case of emergency. When a call
            comes in on the specialemergency number, 343-8800, the receiver is placed into the
            telephone converter, and the caller's message appears on the teletypewriter. Each deaf family
            will have a code, and they
 will send their code and the nature of the emergency for quick
            action from fire control.
      
       
        If one of the nearly 40 deaf families in the area should
 have a fire of other emergency, they will be able to contact the
 Oswego County Fire Control quickly, thanks to a new system
 of teletypewriters for the deaf: The system was inaugurated
 recently with the acquisition of a teletypewriter system for the
 county Fire Control center, at the corner of E. Bridge and E.
 Sixth Sts. in Oswego. The Fire Advisory Board voted approval
 for participation in the program, at their last regular meeting.
 The teletypewriter system at Fire Control was donated
 by Helen Ostrynski, in memory of Louis J , Ostrynski. Mrs.
 Ostrynski, a former art teacher in the Pulaski school district
 and a life-long resident of the Pulaski area, has "a heart made
 of nothing but pure gold," according to Leonard Prins of the
 Richland Lions Club, which is one of four Lions clubs
 participating in the program. The Mexico, Parish, and Pulaski
 Lions Clubs are also involved, helping deaf people to acquire
 the machinery for their homes.
 
         
       
        With the new system, a deaf person who has theteletypewriter in his or her home, dials the emergency
 number, 343-8800, and places the telephone receiver into a
 special converter on the teletype machine. The caller can then
 communicate with Fire Control by typing messages and
 reading the reply from the control center.
 
         
       
        Each deaf family will have a code number, and this willimmediately identify their call to the Fire Control Center.
 They will need only give their code and specify if it is a fire or
 other emergency. At present there are three machines in deaf
 families' homes, including two in Sandy Creek and one in
 West Monroe. Two more are in the works for the Mexico area.
 Deaf persons can purchase the home teletypewriters
 for about $200, and the Lions clubs offer help to area
 residents who cannot afford the cost. The four Lions clubs,
 including the Mexico club, have recently voted to acquire a
 system for Betty Gregory of the Tollgate Road in Mexico.
 The machine, called a TTY, is donated to
 Teletypewriters for the Deaf Inc. (TDI) by Western Electric
 Co. a division of the New York Telephone Company. Harold
 Roach of Mexico is the only authorized TDI agent in central
 New York State. When a TTY is donated by the telephone
 company or other agency, the TDI agent has it reconditioned
 for use by the hearing-impaired and assigns it to a deaf
 person who requests one. The particular TTY now in use at
 the Fire Control Center was reconditioned by a deaf TDI
 agent in Rochester, Lester Zimet, who owns and operates his
 own repair shop.
 
         
       
        The home machine also can be used by deaf people tocommunicate with their friends. The telephone receiver is
 placed into the converter apparatus, and switched on. When
 the telephone rings, a light flashes, alerting the owner that a
 call is coming through. The deaf persons can then use the
 teletypewriter to send and receive messages.
 Although Alexander Graham Bell invented the
 telephone for his deaf wife over 100 years ago, it is only since
 1964 that its use has become available to the deaf with the
 invention of a coupler or terminal that converts the type from
 a TTY into impulses that go over the telephone wires in the
 same way as a human voice. Another TTY and coupler
 converts it back to type, using the five-level Baudot code. It is
 estimated that there are more than 25,000 TTY's in use in the
 USA, Canada, and Europe.
 
         
       
        The Mexico, Parish, Richland, and Pulaski LionsClubs, have also purchased a Porta-Printer, and donated it to
 Rev. Roger Crassi of the Wesleyan Church in Pulaski. Rev.
 Crassi hears and communicates by sign language as well.
 The Porta Printer, which cost approximately $650, is
 smaller than a portable typewriter and is equipped with a
 telephone converter. Powered by AC or battery, it can be
 taken anywhere and can be used in a telephone booth.
 captions
 
         
       
        
        
 
   
          We are still looking for more photos of Lester but imagine our
          surprise when Sally Taylor gave us this one of him and there was THAT
          TTY!... It made a cold perilous journey with many other things that
          Lester had that turned up in Michigan. Matt and Alex wanted to get out
          of the cold weather back there for a road trip so this worked out
          well. there was even an old model 19 and a 15 there too...the poor
          truck was loaded! To read more on  Lester's collections trip to
          Arizona and SMECC  read...
          HERE
           
    
       
        When I hit the test message on Lester's old APCOM
        Phonetype Vit fired up! This had not been used for over 30 years I guess... 
        -Ed#
  
 From the  Paul and Sally Taylor Collection at 
        SMECC.  Lester Zimet
      Ad - Inside front cover1986 TTY/TDD DIRECTORY
 Rochester Tel-Com Association of the Deaf Inc.
 
 
 Want to get involved in accessibility for the Deaf and Hard
      of Hearing? JOIN 
      TDI!
 
 
        
        
          
            "TDI provides leadership in achieving equal
            access to telecommunications, media and information technologies for deaf and hard of hearing people." 
            Shaping An Accessible World!
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