4 pwh home, and stayed in the house, and not come out, because he just more or less made me understand, that even though I was messed up there was people less fortunate than I had been. He made me accept the fact that what had happened, had happened, and I had to live with it. B: Which year were you in the auto accident? C: November of (70. B: One thing I noticed on the walls there, as I got into the hospital, it plainly told you that if you diq4 a2ve hospital insurance you would not be admitted. They on accept any patients without hospital insurance, according to that sigh. And they,. I think that this was a blanket ruling; it doe(ri- make any difference whether somebody. dying or net. Jtls-very impersonal, it seems, in a city. C: It is. Well, now, when I was in the hospital up here, the first thing they asked me for was, you know, did I have Medicare, Medical Aid, Pte-insurance, and they started worrying about the bill. When I was in the hospital in North Carolina, even though I was taken into the emergency room, they never mentioned anything about whether I had the money to pay it. They were more or less-4ateefs edy to me, interested in doing what they could for me, before they worried about the money. In fact, I think I had been in there two or three days before anybody even came in to mention the money, and here, if you happen to get in and they doJtisk you about the money at the desk, then thIlIbe there, and you can bank on it the next day, to find out if you can pay it, ar how yuIr going to pay it, if you got medical assistance, or soon, and so forth. B: Were you at Church Homes- hospital, owover at.... C: I was at Church Homes twice.