Your Group Insurance Leads The Field! (Continued from Page One) average allowance for hospital extras !? the other companies is $150-$180. he Fieldcrest plan pays $150 plus 75 Percent of the balance up to $1,000. Al- ,hough our plan is not caUed a ma- ^or medical plan, you can see that it just about the same! The Fieldcrest schedule of surgical enefits pays a maximum of $300, plus separatg anesthesia benefit. The Prgical maximum for the other com- Phnies averaged $200-$250, with the jhesthesia benefit included in the al- owances for surgery or hospital extras. , tn addition to the hospital-surgical ouefits, the Fieldcrest plan pays $4 a 3y up to 70 days for doctors’ visits oth ^ the hospital. Only a few of the ^ her companies surveyed had this jj^hefit, and generally, those with the Q^hefit either paid a lesser daily rate Paid it for fewer days, in some in- hPces as few as 31 days. •llJRx BUT NOT HOSPITALIZED One of the most attractive and most features of the Fieldcrest insur- j, h® plan is the Supplemental Accident oj^'^hion. None of the plans of the lib surveyed contained as , eral a coverage providing additional g hefits for accidental injury to the Ployee or his dependents. jof the other plans provide acci- g^ht benefits in the emergency room ^ hospital as an outpatient. They htain the restriction that treatment ^ hst be rendered within 24 or 48 hours' the accident. gj^^sldcrest’s $300 Supplemental Ac cent coverage provides benefits for ^ y accident if the treatment is ren- ®hed within 90 days of the accident. The Fieldcrest plan pays the benefit if treatment is rendered in the doc tor’s office and covers any charges in connection with the accident, even in cluding the cost of prescription drugs, bandages, braces, etc. ■When an accident results in hospital confinement, the Supplemental Acci dent benefit becomes an extra cover age and the additional $300 is allowed toward charges not covered by the basic Hospital-Surgical-Medical plan. FULL BENEFITS PAID Unlike most plans of hospital-surgi cal insurance, the -entire benefits under the Fieldcrest plan are paid regardless of whether the employee or dependent is due benefits from other insurance. This means that a Fieldcrest em ployee not only receives 100 percent of his benefits, in addition to any other payments, but also he is spared the frequent long delays in settling claims when more than one insurance com pany is involved. COVERAGE NOW! Under Fieldcrest’s “immediate cover age provision,” benefits become effec tive immediately if the employee signs the acceptance card at the time of his employment. (The only exception is the Accident and Health insurance which requires that an employee work at least 15 days before benefits are allow ed under this particular coverage.) However, every other textile insur ance plan surveyed had at least a nine- months waiting period before preg nancy benefits are payable and some companies, required at least a 10-months waiting I; period before allowing preg nancy benefits. Thus, in contrast to many company Alexander Named ‘Industrial Man Of Year’ '*• P. (Jake) Alexander, purchasing at the North Carolina Finishing ®tnpany division, was recently elected j^dustrial Man of the Year by the “Wan Industrial Management Club in Salisbury, j -Active in many clubs and organiza- ,«ns in the community, Mr. Alexander chairman of the Rowan County Board 'lie Welfare, a member of the Publii aiisbury City Board of Education and ^“airman of the education committee the Chamber of Commerce. is a member of the Board of Di- ?®®tors for the North Carolina Commit- ® on Social Concern, a former director h h vice president of the Salisbury- v,'*^an Community Service Council, blic relations director-co-chairman of Q, ® 1968 fund drive for United Negro t>°hege fund and vice chairman of the Carolina Association of Public ®tlare board members. ALEXANDER ONDAY, APRIL 14, 1969 insurance plans in which there are waiting periods and various deducti bles before benefits can begin, the Fieldcrest plan pays across-the-board, immediately, with no “fine print” pro visions that might cause misunderstand ing. ALL ARRANGED TO SERVE YOU AND YOUR FAMILY This is true because the Fieldcrest group insurance plan was developed specifically for the company’s em ployees and designed to fit their needs. The benefits were arranged to “do the most good for the most people”— to give the greatest protection possible for employees and their families. The Group Plan is administered by Fieldcrest’s qwn insurance specialists and all claims paid from the General Offices at Eden. There are two reasons for this: (1) the self-administering helps to keep the cost down, and (2) it greatly facilitates the handling of claims. A large percentage of the claims are paid “on the spot,” the em ployee receiving his insurance check when he brings the claim form to the Insurance Department. Claims from outlying locations likewise are handled quickly and efficiently by the Insur ance DepaVtment at the General Of fices. RETIREES IMPORTANT, TOO While the Hospital-Surgical-Medical insurance plan meets the needs of ac tive employees and their families, the company’s retired employees are kept in mind. When an employee retires under the pension plan, the employees is. given $1,000 in free life insurance. (Again, the only exception to this is at the North Carolina Finishing Company division.) Also, Fieldcrest developed a special Medicare Supplement for retired em ployees. This insurance pays, beyond Medicare, a liberal 75 percent of hos pital, surgical and medical charges up to $1,000 per year or $2,000 per year, depending on the plan selected by the employee upon retirement. These bene fits are payable for the period the re tired employee or dependent is hos pitalized. Most of the other textile companies have a Medicare Supple ment but it is more restrictive, paying certain fixed amounts. Whether you are an active employee facing the financial problems of sick ness and accidents or an older employee living on reduced income, you are pro tected by Fieldcrest’s Group Insurance Plan. We can all take pride in the fact that our plan is regarded as being at the very top in the textile industry. It can .stand on its own in any “crowd” as an up-to-date, sound, well-adminis tered plan providing liberal benefits at the lowest possible cost to employees.