
 
		18 
 COURIER LIFE, MARCH 25-31, 2022 
 Woman shot in the face  
 on Canarsie street: cops By Félix V. Matos RodRíguez 
 Police  inspect  evidence  left  at  the  scene of  a  shooting  in Canarsie, Brooklyn on March  21,  2022. 
  Photo by Lloyd Mitchell 
 BY ROBERT POZARYCKI 
 A  32-year-old  woman  
 was  shot  in  the  face  in  
 front of a Brooklyn housing  
 complex  Monday  
 night, and police are still  
 searching for the suspect  
 who pulled the trigger. 
 Law  enforcement  
 sources  said  the  shooting  
 happened  at  about  10  
 p.m.  on  March  21  at  the  
 Breukelen  Houses  at  657  
 East  108th  St.,  off  Glenwood  
 Road, in Canarsie. 
 Officers  from the 69th  
 Precinct  and  NYPD  PSA  
 1,  in  responding  to  a  
 911  call  about  the  shooting, 
   found  the  victim  on  
 the  sidewalk  with  bullet  
 wounds  to  her  right  arm  
 and face. 
 Based  on  a  preliminary  
 investigation,  
 sources familiar with the  
 case  said,  police  believe  
 the  victim  was  deliberately  
 targeted  by  a  man  
 with whom she had a previous  
 relationship. 
 The  gunman,  whose  
 description  was  unknown, 
  was last seen fleeing  
 inside a white pickup  
 truck,  police  sources  
 said. 
 EMS  rushed  the  victim  
 to Brookdale University  
 Hospital,  where  she  
 was  listed  in  stable  condition. 
 So far, no arrests have  
 been made in the ongoing  
 investigation, police said. 
 Anyone  with  information  
 regarding  the  
 shooting  can  call  Crime  
 Stoppers  at  800-577- 
 TIPS  (for  Spanish,  dial  
 888-57-PISTA).  You  can  
 also submit tips online at  
 crimestoppers.nypdonline. 
 org,  or  on  Twitter @ 
 NYPDTips. All  calls  and  
 messages  are  kept  confidential. 
 HIGHER ED TODAY 
 20 years teaching students to Chase their dreams 
 One night early in my tenure as Chancellor, 
  I decided to attend an event called  
 Night  at  the  Museum  that  is  held  each  
 year by Macaulay Honors College. It’s the  
 kickoff to the college’s semester-long Arts  
 in New York  seminar, and gives Macaulay’s  
 incoming  first-year  students  the  opportunity  
 to  visit  the Brooklyn Museum  
 for a special experience with art.  
 I had intended to drop by, welcome the  
 students  to CUNY  and  offer  a  few words  
 about  Macaulay,  CUNY’s  selective  honors  
 college. But I wound up staying until  
 closing  time.  It  was  more  than  the  collection  
 of ancient Egyptian art  that kept  
 me  there;  it was  the  intriguing  students,  
 several of whom told me it was their first  
 visit  ever  to  a  museum.  Macaulay  was  
 founded to attract New York’s most promising  
 students,  and  I was  so  engaged  by  
 these  young  people  —  their  enthusiasm,  
 inquisitiveness,  aspirations  and  passion  
 to learn — that I really did spend a night  
 at the museum.  
 This academic year marks the 20th anniversary  
 of  what  was  originally  called  
 the  CUNY  Honors  College.  Its  creation  
 was  a  landmark  in  CUNY’s  efforts  in  
 those years to elevate its stature as a premier  
 public  university  by  attracting  exceptional  
 high school students who might  
 otherwise  go  off  to  private  schools.  Two  
 decades and nearly 6,000 graduates later,  
 Macaulay is one of the jewels of our University, 
  providing broad educational and  
 extracurricular experiences, along with a  
 host of  supports  that enable  the  students  
 to  realize  their  potential,  graduate  debtfree  
 and begin making their mark.  
 Tone Set by School’s Namesake 
 It  all  started modestly, with  an  inaugural  
 class  of  fewer  than  200  students.  
 Today Macaulay has more than 2,000 students  
 from  a  consortium  of  eight  CUNY  
 campuses.  The  catalyst  for  what  made  
 Macaulay what  it  is  today was  its namesake, 
  William E. Macaulay, a philanthropist  
 and  business  leader  who  graduated  
 with honors as an economics major at City  
 College in 1966. He was the first in his family  
 to graduate college, and he never forgot  
 that his gateway to success was the access  
 he had to a top-quality public education.  
 In  2006,  Bill  Macaulay  and  his  wife  
 Linda changed honors education at CUNY  
 with  a  $30  million  endowment  —  still  
 among the largest gifts in the University’s  
 history.  It gave  the college  its own building  
 and  triggered  its  growth  into  one  of  
 the  top-ranked  public  honors  colleges  in  
 the country.  
 Bill gave the college more than money  
 and  a name. He was  the  founding  chairman  
 of  its  foundation  board,  shook  the  
 hand of every graduate at commencement  
 and was a guiding force until his death in  
 2019. The culminating event of this year’s  
 anniversary  commemoration  will  be  a  
 celebration of Bill Macaulay in May.  
 Of course, if he were still with us Bill  
 would  be  turning  the  compliments  back  
 on the students and alumni. Graduates of  
 the early years are now coming into their  
 own,  taking on  leadership roles and paying  
 forward the opportunities that helped  
 them advance. Six alumni are now on the  
 Macaulay board. 
 Macaulay  is  one  of  the  outstanding  
 CUNY  success  stories  of  the  last  two decades  
 and a great example of the strength  
 of  the  consortium model  to  leverage  the  
 very  best  of  the  CUNY  system.  It  is  a  
 model  that  is ready  to continue  to  thrive  
 as we move beyond Macaulay’s 20th anniversary. 
 In Keeping with CUNY’s Ideals 
 Three  years  ago,  the  college  started  
 the  Macaulay  Bridge  Program  to  open  
 its  doors  for  the  first  time  to  promising  
 transfer students from CUNY community  
 colleges,  and  the  first  students  earned  
 their  degrees  last  Spring.  Much  of  that  
 inclusionary  drive  comes  from  within:  
 Macaulay  students,  faculty  and  alumni  
 have long pushed for the college to adhere  
 to CUNY’s highest ideals of diversity, equity  
 and inclusion.  
 One  thing  that  hasn’t  changed  over  
 these  20  years  is  the  sense  of  unlimited  
 possibility the college gives its students. 
 “Macaulay  has  taught me  how  to  really  
 capitalize  on  opportunities,”  said  
 Gennady  Vulakh,  a  graduating  senior  
 of  Macaulay  at  Brooklyn  College  who’s  
 headed  for medical  school.  “It  gives  you  
 a structure that pushes you to go beyond  
 your  limits,  to explore new fields and  interact  
 with  people  you  otherwise  never  
 would have.  It  taught me  to chase what  I  
 want.”  
 Bill Macaulay couldn’t have put it better. 
 Félix  V.  Matos  Rodríguez  is  the  chancellor  of  The  
 City  University  of  New  York  (CUNY),  the  largest  
 urban  public  university  system  in  the  United  
 States. 
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