Being a Part of Radical Change: A Conversation with Joan Acker
Q: You grew up in Indiana—where?
Indianapolis. I went to Shortridge High School, then to DePauw University in Greencastle for one year and couldn’t stand it so I dropped out. The war started and it was much more interesting to work. I worked in a radio station; I was the person who chose the music for the disc jockeys. I had several hundred dollars to spend. What I did was go to the record stores and buy records. That was the end of my career in that regard. Then I moved to New York. I really did not like Indiana; I found it racist, although I did not know much about racism yet.
Indianapolis. I went to Shortridge High School, then to DePauw University in Greencastle for one year and couldn’t stand it so I dropped out. The war started and it was much more interesting to work. I worked in a radio station; I was the person who chose the music for the disc jockeys. I had several hundred dollars to spend. What I did was go to the record stores and buy records. That was the end of my career in that regard. Then I moved to New York. I really did not like Indiana; I found it racist, although I did not know much about racism yet.
