Judith Isroff
Akron, Ohio, owes much of
its beauty, its arts, and its leadership to Judith Isroff.
Isroff started the Keep
Akron Beautiful movement more than 20 years ago when the city was looking particularly
seedy. The movement started as a grassroots movement to educate the public about
the need for recycling and beautification. Isroff was its first executive director
(from 1981-1989) and helped write the grants that brought much needed funding
to the project.
As an arts advocate, Isroff
and her husband Clifford set up the Lola K. Isroff Arts Assistance Fund which
underwrites a summer arts program for Akron junior and high school students at
The University of Akron. She also serves on the Ohio Citizens for the Arts board,
the Community Advisory Council to WKSU and the board of trustees of the Akron
Art Museum.
As a citizen concerned about
the future of the city, Isroff became president of Leadership Akron, where she
oversaw a training program that helps mold the next generation of male and female
leaders. She was president of the Akron Roundtable and is a lifetime member of
its board. She also was the first and only woman board president of the Akron
Jewish Community Federation.
Over the years, Isroff has
received many awards, including the Myrtle Wreath Award from Hadassah, the Women's
History Project Woman of the Year award and (with her husband) the 2001 Bert Polsky
Humanitarian Award.
Photos courtesy of the
Beacon Journal.
