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section • October
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Friday, October 16, 2015
vol. 3, no. 42
Hills
GUide To rosLyn
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16, 2015
w.P. doctor remembered at service Manhasset funeral home hosts private remembrance open to family only By J oe n i K i c a n d BiLL san anTonio A funeral service was held last week for Dr. Kiersten Cerveny, the Manhasset woman who was found dead on Oct. 4 in the lobby of an apartment building in New York City’s Chelsea neighborhood. The service was private and only for immediate family members, according to an obituary posted on the Fairchild Sons Inc. funeral home website. Efforts to reach administrators at the Manhasset funeral home, located at 1570 Northern Blvd., were unavailing. A police source told the Daily News last Monday that preliminary autopsy findings show that Cerveny, 38, a dermatologist who practiced at Prohealth Care Associates LLP at 2 Hillside Ave. in Williston Park, was not a homicide victim, but instead died of a cocaine overdose. “Based on the preliminary finds, we are not treating this as a
homicide case,” the source told the Daily News. “There is nothing at this point to suggest criminal activity. We have no indication, so far, of any force issue in her death.” A law enforcement official told Newsday last Tuesday that the preliminary autopsy revealed that Cerveny had cocaine in her system but further toxicology tests were needed to determine how much was in her system and whether there were other drugs present as well. An official from the city’s Office of the Chief Medical Examiner said that toxicology tests are currently ongoing. Results of the tests can take anywhere from a few days to two weeks to determine, depending on the case, the official said. Cerveny was discovered “unconscious and unresponsive” around 8:30 a.m. in the vestibule of the building, located at West 16th Street near Seventh Avenue, according to published reports. Continued on Page 45
Shelves have begun to empty ahead of Greenvale’s Pathmark closure
Cupboards go bare at Pathmark, Waldbaum’s By J oe n i K i c
The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. auctioned the remainder of its unsold supermarkets, including a Waldbaum’s in Great Neck, at a Manhattan law office last Thursday and Friday.
The Waldbaum’s at 40 Great Neck Road, which had received no bid at the first round of auctions on Oct. 1 and 2, again received no bids after the second round of auctioning, according to Local 338 of the Retail, Wholesale, Department Store Union and the
United Food and Commercial Workers website, which represents employees of the various A&P-owned stores. Local 338 president John R. Durso said it was unclear what would happen with the unsold supermarkets, but a fuContinued on Page 46
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