Eden, N. C., June 12, 1972 No. 24 Health Insurance Coverage Is Expanded On July 1 the company’s Major Med- pensive drugs, etc. There has rievelnn- fnv .n On July ij the company’s Major Med insurance will be updated, im- toved and offered to all employees in ^,® company. Major Medical is an ad- ^’bonal form of protection, coming into Peration after benefits under the Base 'J^ital Plan have been exhausted. ^ Basic Hospital Plan will remain It will continue to do the of covering the initial expenses and . c average hospitalization. It has done job, because of its design, for ^ Fieldcrest employees. jj You may recall that Mill Whistle ar- (jj in the past have reviewed its per- la 5'®'^ce and pointed out that for the several years, it has covered 75 to ^ Percent of the average charges of III . hospitalizations of employees and dependents. Of 'the ever-increasing costs Mt 1 sick and admitted to the hos- average charges are going .up. due to general inflation, more .^isticated methods of treatment, ex pensive drugs, etc. There has develop ed an increasing need on the part of all Fieldcrest employees for additional coverage over and above the Base Plan. Better Benefits Fieldcrest’s revised Major Medical Plan will meet this need. After the Base Hospital Plan has paid all that it will pay, the plan member will pay the next $100 and then Major Medical begins paying 80 percent of all covered charges connected with the hospitaliza tion up to a maximum of $25,000. The Major Medical Insurance and the existing Group Insurance Plan, includ ing the Base Hospital Plan, will be com bined into one “package”. Although you must be ho.spitalized to start a claim, the Major Medical bene fit period extends for six months from the date that you are released from the hospital. This means that any drugs, doctor’s visits, registered nurses’ care or other covered charges which are re lated to your hospital stay will be cov- !^rs. Burcham Attains 50-Year Record MAMIE J. BURCHAM Mamie J. Burcham, of the Sheet Fin ishing Office, today (June 12) com pletes an outstanding record of 50 years of continuous service with the Company. She is to be honored by the manage ment of Fieldcrest Mills at a luncheon at Meadow Greens Country Club Tues day, June 13. Other members of the Fieldcrest 50-ycar Club will attend the luncheon. Mrs. Burcham has never been off the payroll for any reason since she was first employed June 12, 1922. She has been engaged in order service and bill ing operations for sheets virtually the entire time. She currently works as a Visi-Records clerk at the Sheet Finish ing Office. She began as a ticket clerk in the Sheet Packing Department at the old Bleachery but for most of her years was in the Order and Billing Depart ment at the Central Warehouse. She has been in the office at the Sheet Fin ishing Mill .since that new plant was occupied in 1966. Mrs. Burcham has worked as clerk, (Continued on Page Four) ered for that length of time even though you have been discharged. Should you be reconfined to the hos pital after that six months’ period, your insurance benefits will begin anew with an additional deductible but also with another six months of coverage from the date of your next release from the hospital. No Waiting As the new plan begins, those em ployees or dependents who were not previously eligible for coverage and are confined to the hospital when the plan takes effect July 1 will be covered by Major Medical back to the date of their admission to the hospital and will re ceive Major Medical benefits from that date. Reasonable Cost The cost of Major Medical to those employees who did not previously have the coverage v/ill be very small. In a new booklet to be distributed to all em ployees around July 1, those new costs will be outlined as part of the total plan cost. (Remember, Major Medical is part of the “package” and cannot be taken separately.) For hourly employees newly eligible for the plan and salaried employees who may not have been members pre viously, the nominal charge for the ad dition of Major Medical benefits will be an increase to the present package (Continued on Page Eight) New Graduates Pictures on page five of this issue of The Mill Whistle show sons and daughters of Fieldcrest employees who are new graduates of colleges and un iversities. To date only a few of the pictures of those graduating have been received. The Mill Whistle will print additional graduates in the June 26 issue. Parents are urged to, send in the pictures and information promptly. In the case of graduates in areas out side of Eden, the parents should turn in the pictures and information to their plant reporter or their local personnel office, or mail it to The Mill Whistle, Fieldcrest Mills, Eden, N. C. 27288.