From helping a children's hospital better serve the emotional needs of its patients to giving parenting advice on WCCO radio, Marvin Ack wanted to make sure that the voice of children was heard.
A child psychologist who had received training in Freud's method of psychoanalysis — even working at one point with Freud's daughter, Anna — Ack pioneered methods in children's health care while he served on staff at what was then a new children's hospital in Minneapolis in the 1970s.
Ack died May 18 at age 93.
In addition to his medical career, Ack was perhaps best known for regular stints on the Boone and Erickson show on WCCO radio, where he dispensed child-rearing advice to callers perplexed about the art of parenting.
"After he had those years on the Boone and Erickson show, people would recognize my name and ask, 'Are you Marvin's daughter?'" said Sheryl Strauss. "You can imagine me as a teenager giving an eye roll and saying, 'Yeah, that is my dad.' "
Raised in New York and New Jersey by Russian immigrant parents, Ack saw his educational progress take a hit when he was expelled from high school.
"He was in a ground-floor classroom and had gone out of the window to get a smoke," said Strauss. "I think the principal was so tired of dealing with him he had to get expelled."
When World War II started, Ack enlisted, helping set up radar stations at air bases in the United Kingdom. While he was stationed there, he met Corrine Lester, whom he would later marry.