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Litovitz was born in New York and moved to
Washington, DC, at the age of 2. He was graduated from old Central High School and attended George Washington University before serving as a Navy radar repair technician in the South Pacific during World War II. After returning, he finished his degree and
33:) to shield cell phone users from harmful electromagnetic radiation, and some of the early fiber optics now used in telecommunications. Litovitz held 25 patents, and was the co-founder of Catholic University's Vitreous State Laboratory, where students used
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to immobilize radioactive waste. The process he pioneered is expected to save 20 years and $ 20 billion in cleanup costs at the government's
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then a Ph.D. at
Catholic University where he taught until 1998 and conducted research until his death.
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Litovitz and his wife, Charlotte, had a daughter, Toby, a son, Gary, and four grandchildren.
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His inventions include a method to safely store nuclear waste, an electronic chip (
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Catholic
University of America School of Arts and Sciences faculty
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22:(October 14, 1923 – May 1, 2006) was physics professor at
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178:United States Navy personnel of World War II
134:"Professor and Inventor Theodore Litovitz"
193:Fellows of the American Physical Society
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188:Catholic University of America alumni
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24:The Catholic University of America
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132:Sulivan, Patricia (May 6, 2006).
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98:"World Health Org. Presentation"
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39:Hanford Nuclear Reservation
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198:United States Navy sailors
114:Vitreous State Laboratory
26:and a prolific inventor.
20:Theodore Aaron Litovitz
16:American physicist
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81:"EMX Biochip"
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141:. Retrieved
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168:2006 deaths
163:1923 births
46:Vietnam War
44:During the
31:EMX Biochip
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143:2013-11-27
68:References
41:alone.
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