Dr. Everett D. Jones, 86, orthopedic surgeon Dr...

October 25, 2000

Dr. Everett D. Jones, 86, orthopedic surgeon

Dr. Everett D. Jones, a retired Baltimore orthopedic surgeon, died Friday of congestive heart failure at Greater Baltimore Medical Center. He was 86.

The former Palm Beach, Fla., resident was living at Brighton Gardens Assisted Living Community in Towson at the time of his death.

Dr. Jones had a medical practice at St. Paul and Biddle streets from 1950 to 1978. He also was a sports medicine consultant to the Baltimore Colts during the 1950s and 1960s, said family members.

Born and raised in Westminster, he earned his bachelor's degree from Western Maryland College in 1938. He was a 1942 graduate of the University of Maryland School of Medicine and completed his internship at Maryland General Hospital.

During World War II, he served with the Army Medical Corps at a military hospital at Valley Forge, Pa. He was discharged in 1945 with the rank of captain.

After the war, he completed internships in orthopedics at University of Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia, and Kernan Hospital in Baltimore. He practiced in High Point, N.C., before returning to Baltimore in 1950.

An avid outdoorsman, hunter and yachtsman, Dr. Jones commissioned the building of a 41-foot yawl, the Shamrock, in 1961 and competed for five years in ocean races, including that from Annapolis to Halifax and the grueling Annapolis-to-Bermuda Race. He gave up the sport after his wife's death.

In 1946, he married Jean Monaghan, who died in 1966.

A second marriage to Frances B. Murdoch ended in divorce.

In 1981, he married Ellen Nugent, who died in 1998.

Dr. Jones, who earlier had lived in Roland Park and Bozman, Talbot County, moved to Palm Beach after he retired. He enjoyed painting landscapes and golfing.

He was a member of the Everglades Club in Palm Beach and Green Spring Valley Hunt Club.

Services are private.

He is survived by two sons, Gregory D. Jones of Ruxton and Mark A. Jones of Evanston, Ill.; a daughter, M. Christine Jones of Roanoke, Va.; and three grandchildren.

Mark J. Guttmann, 76, teacher and researcher

Mark Joseph Guttmann, a retired physicist and teacher, died Oct. 18 of heart failure at Greater Baltimore Medical Center. He was 76 and lived in the Glendale section of Baltimore County.

A member of the Christian Brothers from 1942 to 1976, he taught and conducted research at LaSalle University in Philadelphia from 1955 to 1998. He was an instructor in quantum physics at Loyola College in Baltimore from 1993 to 1994.

The author of scholarly studies, he co-wrote a college text, "An Introduction to Laboratory Physics," in 1956.

Born in Baltimore and raised in Dundalk, he was a graduate of Calvert Hall College high school. He earned bachelor's and master's degrees in physics from Catholic University of America. In 1962, he received a doctorate in nuclear physics from the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Ind.

He was a member of the Mathematics Association of America and the American Association of Physics Teachers.

In 1979, he married Vera Duvall, who survives him.

A Mass was offered Saturday.

In addition to his wife, he is survived by an aunt, Frieda B. Webb of Chicago; and a cousin, Judy Sturm of Chicago.

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