BUSINESS I weet harity RITA CHARLESTON Special to the Jewish News erry Greenfield is honest about his cu- linary passions. "I've always loved to eat quite a bit!" he says from his plant in Water- bury, Vt. And so, when he and partner and longtime friend, I Bennett Cohen, were looking around for a business they could create and call their r own, "we just naturally I gravitated toward food." They first thought about making bagels, Greenfield ex- plains, but gave up on the idea when it turned out to be an expensive proposition. "So ) we settled on ice cream in- stead," says the co-creator of Ben and Jerry's Homemade, Inc. "We figured it would be cheaper. It turns out it costs about the same, but ig- norance really is bliss!' Ben and Jerry's ice cream empire was founded in 1978 in a renovated gas station in Burlington, Vt., with a $12,000 investment, $4,000 of which was borrowed. With the help of an old-fashioned rock salt ice cream-maker and a then $5 correspondence course in ice cream-making from Penn State under their belts, they soon became popular for their funky, chunky flavors, made from fresh Vermont milk and cream. A year later, they were delivering Ben and Jerry's ice cream to grocery stores and restaurants, and in 1981 their ice cream was hailed as "the best in the world" by Time magazine. Since 1985, each fiscal year has seen a sales increase of ) more than $10 million, more than was pulled in during the first five years combined. Also in 1985, Ben and Jerry's moved its corporate head- quarters and ice cream fac- tory from greater Burlington to Waterbury, into a new 43,000 square-foot facility where up to 400,000 gallons of ice cream per month is produced. In 1988, Ben and Jerry's opened a second manufactur- ing facility in Springfield, Vt., Ben and Jerry's ice cream founders have turned over 7.5 percent of their profits to charity. Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield say their home-made ice cream business has allowed them to be philanthropic. to produce its ice cream novelties — Brownie Bar Sandwiches and Peace Pops. Other Ben and Jerry's company-owned shops and franchises are now springing up all over the country. Before they reached this level of success, Greenfield had been trying, and failing, to get into medical school. Cohen, a college dropout, had gone through various dead- end jobs. Among other things, he was a night janitor at Friendly's, a Manhattan cab driver, a security guard and a pottery teacher for emotional- ly disturbed children. When they joined forces and started their ice cream em- pire, "we were expecting to be in it for two to three years," Greenfield says. "We were just looking for something that would be fun to do, where we could be our own bosses and have a good time!' A dozen years and millions of dollars later, they are still having a good time. But they are also doing much more. The duo is trying to teach the rest of the world that doing well in business and doing well in the world are not mutually exclusive. In 1985, they started the Ben and Jerry Foundation, which allocated 7.5 percent of the company's pre-tax profits to social causes. In 1988, Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream created a new chocolate-covered bar and a new cause, encouraging cuts in the U.S. military budget. They pledged one percent of their business' pre-tax profits to a new group called 1 Per- cent for Peace. Their mission was to pursuade Congress to cut one percent, some $3 billion, from the military budget and allocate it towards international peace efforts. For their work, they were recently named the 1990 win- ners of the Business Ex- ecutive for Nuclear Age Con- cern (BENAC) Peace Award. "Our basic philosophy is that business should be fun," Greenfield says. "But we are also of the opinion that business should have a social mission as well as a profit and product mission. All three parts of that are equally important to us. Ben sees business as a vehicle for making the world a better place to live and has come up with a new product called Rainforest Crunch ice cream, which uses cashews har- vested in the rain forest to make the forests more pro- fitable. The company we buy from donates 60 percent of profits back to peace and en- vironmental issues. "Both of us understood at the start," Greenfield says, "that if we were going to be successful, we were going to have to depend on the support of a lot of people in the com- munity. So it seems kind of crazy not to want to give back to support people who have supported you." ❑ THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 47