5 pwh B: Well, they tell me tha t much better, at Church Homes, than it is over at Johns Hopkins Hospital. : C: Well,( Iiv never had any occasion to be in the Hospital at Johns Hopkins, tht I've/heard a lot of tales about it, but (iPs my personal preference, f.t I always go to Church Homes, and if any- body in my family is sick, th tis-where we go, to Church Home. B: Well, it seems that in a case like this, the best is not good enough. The best is not very good. I imagine that people are pretty much pushedf6Oi doctorsuand nurses and this sort of thing in the city. C: Well, I think so too. I just doi- t think there s-ehough to go around, so to speak. You-gat-more,, in ratio, ygu-ve got more people than you have doctors. I guess they more or less have to, like an assembly line, work on you and get you out so they can take some- body else, but it see"m-4ike in O '\ _\r 'it-seems like theyd) take their time, thy h- to them youtrr a person, t-4at you woul n't be there if there was any choice about it. B: Not just a _, but a real human being. You know, on several occasions v walked by people on the street, who were lying out in the sun unconscious, right on the street, and no policeman was stopping to do anything about it, nobody was trying to help the person. I dot know whether they were hurt, or whether they were alcoholics, had passed out or what, but se seen that on several occasions, and it always shocks me that here is a human being in need, and everybody walking around him, and nobody cares. C: People do t.want to get involved. B: Thats a terrible thing to me. C: It is, because you ca t o through life without getting involved in something.