Since David Died Continued from preceding page He turned again, skied several hundred feet and then fell approximately 600 feet over an ice break in a glacier in an area called Plateau-Rosa. The cause of his death was a fractured skull and asphyxiation. His body would be airlifted by helicopter from the site. Ms. Raznik, however, did not know what happened to him. She waited and wat- ched the slope until the last skiers came in. Ms. Raznik headed back to the gondola which would take her to the village of Zermatt. There, a ticket taker, who came from Lon- don, noticed the dazed con- dition she was in as well as the word "Michigan" on her sweatshirt. She would come to learn that Mr. Stillman wasn't the first person to die on that cliff. She found out in a cruel • During a happier time, Dr. Stillman relaxes with his son. Below, the letter "B" indicates the point where David Stillman went under the boundary rope. 24 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1992 way what happened to Mr. Stillman. The village police brought in an Eng- lish-speaking shopkeeper to interpret. "Your friend has had an accident," the man said. When he was asked what hospital Mr. Stillman was in, the terse reply that followed went, "Your friend is dead." Ms. Raznik, according to her statement, screamed and convulsed to the floor. But she was strong enough to refuse sedation. She even had the unforgettable task of calling Mr. Stillman's parents, who were vacationing with daughter Lauren in Tuscon. When the phone rang late that night, the family members assumed that someone in the family was either sick or dead. But that's what we all sort of assume. Lauren heard her mother scream from the other room. "You think that it's a mistake, that it didn't real- ly happen," said Lauren, who is studying for her master's in sociology at the University of Michigan. "It took time for it to sink in that this was the truth," said Mrs. Stillman. "David knew how to ski. He was an expert. Besides, people don't die from skiing. They may break a leg or rip up a knee, but they don't die, not a skier like David." Since his death, the Stillmans have been on a crusade to bring attention to the European style of 'ski resort that they believe took their son's life. While they don't argue that David did go under the rope and off-course, they are angry that there weren't sufficient warning signs to keep their son and others out of danger. It wasn't until Ms. Raz- nik was at the police sta- tion that she received a map of the area with a warning in four languages: "Under no circumstances leave the marked and bar- ricaded ski runs." There were no warning signs. Ms. Raznik was told that skiers timed them- selves on a downhill run nearby (see photo). David Stillman fell off a ledge just to the right of that downhill run. When he died, the official correspondence coming from Zermatt had nothing to do with condolences and sadness. Instead, the fami- ly was told to wire thousands of dollars if they wanted their son flown back to the States. The family would receive an itemized bill that was stomach-turning, every- thing from the major ex- pense of transporting the body via Swissair through Zurich, London and then to Detroit, to money for a shroud and telephone and police expenses. Money was even taken from David's wallet in Switzerland to help pay the expenses. Recently, the family received the police report with photographs of the accident scene. They waited almost half a year to receive the official pa- pers. They were sent four photographs. Two of the photos show the roped-in run and the point where David went under the rope. But the first photo the family would see in the report was that of their son and brother lying in the snow, his chest exposed be- cause of the CPR effort, the snow blood-stained. The family has said they have been stonewalled by the Swiss government and the resort itself for more details on the accident. They've also been told there have been other deaths and injuries at the same location, though they can't substantiate it. They are strongly considering legal action, and they are also trying to bring the cir- cumstances to the atten- tion of the national Ameri- can media. In the living room of their lakeside West Bloom- field home are various family photos, some in- cluding David. But on this day, adjacent to those photos are blow-up shots showing the Matterhorn's snow white mountain landscapes and blue skies. Under most circumstances, the photos are beautiful. But there, making for a tragic contrast in the foreground, is the dead body of their son. "I want to spread the news about this accident," said Mrs. Stillman. "This happened to a wonderful, strong young man, a man