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  1. 18. Juni 2023 · He was born on March 30, 1930 in Baltimore, Maryland to Margaret Linnie (née Mackenzie) and Dr. Allen V. Astin, director of the National Bureau of Standards. Evidently inheriting his intellectual bent from his father, Astin was a voracious reader and mathematician, at one point in his high school career mastering an entire semester's worth of study in one evening (that's his story, anyway).

  2. John Astin standing at a height of 5' 11" (1.8 m) was born March 30, 1930 (Aries), in Baltimore, MD as John Allen Astin to Allen V. Astin and Margaret Astin with a brother Alexander Astin. He is an American actor, voice actor and director. He attended Washington, Jefferson College and Johns Hopkins University where he studied mathematics. However he discovered a passion for the theater and ...

  3. 2021 Allen V. Astin Measurement Science Award AWARD CITATION The comprehensive effort was established as a collaboration with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to enable reliable measurements of individual arsenic species in clinical materials and food, supporting the control of arsenic exposure for the benefit of human health.

  4. 26. Nov. 2022 · He was born in the United States to his parents John Astin and Suzanne Hahn. His parents have been divorced. They were married 16 years before they got divorced. Their union was from March 26, 1956, until their divorce on June 14, 1972. David Astin has two biological brothers. His brothers are Allen Astin and Tom Astin.

  5. In 1930, a young Ph.D. physicist named Allen V. Astin secured his first position at the National Bureau of Standards (NBS), now known as NIST. By 1951, he had risen through the ranks to become the director of NBS. It was Astin’s leadership of the bureau through the tumultuous AD-X2 battery additive scandal that solidified his and NIST’s reputation for honesty and integrity.

    • 65 Min.
    • 2179
    • National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
  6. Ernest Ambler; Allen V. Astin, Physics Today, Volume 37, Issue 10, 1 October 1984, Pages 114–116, https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2915888

  7. The Astin Case. On August 21st, one hundred and forty‐four stormy days after the forced resignation of Allen V. Astin as director of the National Bureau of Standards (see Physics Today, VI, 5, 20, May 1953), Secretary of Commerce Sinclair Weeks issued the following press release: “I have asked Dr. Allen V. Astin to continue as Director of ...