Just a thought, maybe CZ ran into someone when she stopped to buy a sweater, maybe someone she previously helped when she worked at the Y?
Or followed home by a stranger to see where she lived?
speculation.
Forty years ago, Christine Ziomkiewicz vanished without a trace. She was last seen on June 23, 1978. The following decades revealed little of the 27-year-old Queen’s lab technician’s disappearance. What happened that day left family and police with few answers. Ziomkiewicz grew up in Kingston...
www.queensjournal.ca
REBECCA FROST NOVEMBER 2, 2018 rbbm
''She was last seen on June 23, 1978. The following decades revealed little of the 27-year-old Queen’s lab technician’s disappearance. What happened that day left family and police with few answers.
Ziomkiewicz grew up in Kingston with her two brothers, Chris and Bernie. After earning a Bachelor of Science from Brock University, she returned to Kingston in 1974.
She worked a few temporary jobs before securing a position with the Physiology Department at Queen’s, working in the labs of what is now Abramsky Hall.
When she disappeared on June 23, it would’ve been an ordinary Friday evening for her. She simply shopped at the Kingston Centre after work, bought a new sweater, and went home. Arriving at her downtown Kingston apartment on Park Street, she chatted with a neighbour before going inside.
It was the last time anyone heard from her. ''
''Her parents doggedly searched for their daughter, turning to at least one private investigator and psychic for help within the first year of her disappearance.
Their private investigator concluded that Ziomkiewicz had started seeing a new boyfriend shortly before her disappearance, but little came from the revelation.
Another day, Stefan and Joan drove 40 kilometres outside of Kingston to the intersection of Highways 15 and 32 km to look for Ziomkiewicz’s remains on advice from a psychic. They trekked though the forest with shovels for hours, and found nothing. ''
''He told The Journal he remembers Christine working as a don at the YMCA during her time at Brock, assisting people who needed shelter.
He said she accepted people and worked with them through difficult times as they put their lives back together.''