- Killed by Ted Bundy.
- She previously had Osgood-Schlatter's disease, which caused "bumps" below her knees.
- She had a mole on her neck.
- Hawkins had brown hair and brown eyes.
- Hawkins has a strong voice, and is direct and to the point, traits that served her well in her job working in urban renewal. A few details have faded over the decades, but not much.
- In 1972-73, the 17-year-old Lakes High School senior was named to the royal court of the Washington Daffodil Festival. To this day, the 81-year-old festival is one of the biggest events in the state.
- Georgann - friends called her George - was in the Brownies, learned to swim early and found success in the pool. Tucked in a small box of her belongings is an AAU swimming medal.
- Hawkins elder sister, Patti, attended Central Washington University in Ellensburg, which was 120.6 miles away from their hometown of Tacoma. When it came time for Georgann to go off to college, her mother didn't want Georgeann as far away as her elder sister had been. At her mothers request, Georgann enrolled at University of Washington in Seattle, which was only 30 miles from her hometown. Hawkins parents paid tuition, books, room and board; Georgann worked all summer to pay for everything else.
- During her freshman year, Georgann joined the on campus sorority Kappa Alpha Theta. After her experiences as a Daffodil princess and seeing the news media coverage of the hearings for the Watergate scandal, she had aspirations of becoming a broadcast journalist or possibly a television news anchor. She was looking into majoring in Broadcast Journalism.
- Daughter of Warren B. Hawkins (1920-2003) and Edie Hawkins.
- Younger sister of Patti Shultz (Hawkins).
- She was mentioned in the film Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile.
- Hawkins' photograph was shown on an episode of The New Detectives when Ted Bundy's case was detailed.
- She had contacts and glasses but did not wear them at the time of her disappearance.
- A skin pigment discoloration on her back.
- She had a tanned complexion at the time she disappeared.
- Niece of Winifred Langdon (Hawkins).
- Sister-in-law Rod Shultz.
- She was a member of Episcopal Church.
- Niece-in-law Bill Langdon.
- Her Alias are Georgeann Hawkins.
- She educated at University of Washington after 1974.
- She educated at Lakewood High School between 1969 and 1973.
- Georgann made the newspapers regularly as the princesses traveled the state attending concerts, meeting children, riding in parades and signing autographs at charity events. A highlight was a trip to the state Legislature, where Georgann addressed lawmakers in spring 1973.
- Georgann Hawkins was a wiggle worm, and it's well-documented in report cards that grade-school teachers sent home to her mom and dad. The little girl couldn't sit still and she loved to talk.
- Georgann's was the sixth disappearance in the region since Jan. 1 - five in Washington. Edie and her husband quickly learned that police agencies didn't share much information and there were no databases like today.
- A meticulous scrapbook details what would be the biggest year in the short but full life of Georgann Hawkins.
- Georgann's sister, Patti - five years older - attended Central Washington, two or three hours away. Edie wanted her youngest daughter closer and suggested the University of Washington in Seattle, about 30 miles from their home in Tacoma.
- In the early hours of June 11, 1974, Georgann Hawkins was headed back to her sorority house to cram for her Spanish final hours later. She stopped at her boyfriend's dorm and talked to him through an open window for a few minutes before continuing down a brightly lit alley. She never made it to the sorority.
- The Pied Piper worked her magic across the state, looking as comfortable modeling funky '70s fashions for the camera as she did talking to elected officials and business owners.
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