Winward1
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Anyone hear of this one? I've read a few things on the web hypothesizing about serial killers and the like but one of her friends believes she was killed by someone who worked on campus and had been stalking her. I believe he is still alive:
THE 1968 MURDER AT UW STILL STINGS KILLER OF WOMAN HAS NOT BEEN FOUND ... YET
GEORGE HESSELBERG ghesselberg@madison.com 608-252-6140 | Posted: Sunday, May 4, 2008
Four decades is a long time to be looking for someone who does not want to be found. It means that only one of you can be successful, either at hiding or finding. In the murder of Christine Rothschild, there is the added skill of remembering.
And to her friends and the few who remember her - the retired detectives, the aging professor, the surviving sister - Rothschild's murder might have been yesterday.
There are indications, however, that their patience has reached a limit. The trail of the murderer could not get any colder, unless the killer is dead, too.
On May 26, 1968, young, pretty, blonde, opinionated freshman Christine Rothschild was murdered on the University of Wisconsin campus in Madison, and her body was stuffed behind some bushes at Sterling Hall. Her death notice might have been in the Madison news weeks ago, so fresh and familiar and brutal are the details, so unsolved is the crime, so unresolved are the mysteries.
On the 40th anniversary of Rothschild's murder, her college friend, Linda Schulko, has arranged for a small group of interested, otherwise disparate parties to gather at 11 a.m. on the campus May 26 for a short ceremony.
"There will be several speakers and a program and a concert from the carillon bell tower," said Schulko, who was a student from Milwaukee, living in Witte Hall, when her friend was murdered.
<MODSNIP>
http://host.madison.com/news/local/...cle_3fc2cd42-23f4-5250-8872-34ed7e04da4c.html
THE 1968 MURDER AT UW STILL STINGS KILLER OF WOMAN HAS NOT BEEN FOUND ... YET
GEORGE HESSELBERG ghesselberg@madison.com 608-252-6140 | Posted: Sunday, May 4, 2008
Four decades is a long time to be looking for someone who does not want to be found. It means that only one of you can be successful, either at hiding or finding. In the murder of Christine Rothschild, there is the added skill of remembering.
And to her friends and the few who remember her - the retired detectives, the aging professor, the surviving sister - Rothschild's murder might have been yesterday.
There are indications, however, that their patience has reached a limit. The trail of the murderer could not get any colder, unless the killer is dead, too.
On May 26, 1968, young, pretty, blonde, opinionated freshman Christine Rothschild was murdered on the University of Wisconsin campus in Madison, and her body was stuffed behind some bushes at Sterling Hall. Her death notice might have been in the Madison news weeks ago, so fresh and familiar and brutal are the details, so unsolved is the crime, so unresolved are the mysteries.
On the 40th anniversary of Rothschild's murder, her college friend, Linda Schulko, has arranged for a small group of interested, otherwise disparate parties to gather at 11 a.m. on the campus May 26 for a short ceremony.
"There will be several speakers and a program and a concert from the carillon bell tower," said Schulko, who was a student from Milwaukee, living in Witte Hall, when her friend was murdered.
<MODSNIP>
http://host.madison.com/news/local/...cle_3fc2cd42-23f4-5250-8872-34ed7e04da4c.html