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Stranger than fiction: The Young Warrior saga at the Institute of American Indian Arts

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Young Warrior editor David McNicholas at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
David John Baer McNicholasâs first novella is inspired by a darkly comedic poem he once wrote about a town that outlawed canned food and built a massive trebuchet, or catapult, to hurl the cans into the distance â only to receive thank-you notes tied to bricks hurled back at them.
Lately, McNicholas has been entangled in a real-life plot eerily similar to his writing. At the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico, food pantries were empty despite a $50,000 grant meant to support them. When The Young Warrior printed criticisms of school officials for these failures and the Associated Student Government began investigating, administrators swiftly retaliated â kicking students out of housing, putting them on probation, and even threatening them with lawsuits.
This may sound like the plot of a neo-noir film bleak enough to rival âChinatown,â but for McNicholas, a creative writing student at IAIA and the founder and editor of The Young Warrior, itâs reality.

McNicholas connects IAIAâs pattern of silencing dissent to broader institutional failures. He recounts how during a faculty meeting with the Board of Trustees, a sculpture professor once dared to mention an academic paper written by a former IAIA department head. The paper showed that even conservative estimates put IAIAâs staff turnover rate at about 30%. McNicholas says when the professor brought it up, âeveryone in the meeting clammed up, and later they came down on him hard. They told him he embarrassed the dean of students and demanded he write a public apology and retraction. He wrote a and quit the next day."
The Young Warrior published the academic paper before quickly being told to retract it.
"We want better,â says McNicholas. âStudent retention is 50%. Graduation is 25% . . . The faculty, staff, and students here are top-notch people, but the administration just supports the rising stars and lets everyone else evaporate."
McNicholasâs own showdown with the administration began when he published an anonymous student letter and flyer accusing the dean of students of bullying and suggesting food-pantry funds had been misappropriated. The letter and flyer resonated with the student body, according to McNicholas, and many came forward to thank him and to offer support.
I love this school. I love the community. I love the students and the faculty. I struggle with the administration after this, but I think that that struggle was there long before I came along. I just kind of exposed it.
When McNicholas published the anonymous letter and flyer, he says students were being forced to buy meal plans they couldnât always use while the dean of students, McNicholas says, dismissed the need for food pantries altogether, claiming, âFIREhave meal plans; they donât need food pantries.â&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;
This explanation rang hollow for McNicholas who, , falls below the poverty line and relies on food pantries to survive.

After the letter and flyer came out, the administration promptly accused McNicholas of âbullyingâ staff with his publication, and IAIA Provost Felipe ColĂłn put him under investigation.
âThey came down on me primarily, but also on a peer who had made an Instagram post, of all things,â he recalls. âI said, âOh shit, theyâre going to throw everything at me.ââ
Anticipating housing sanctions, McNicholas preemptively left campus and lived out of his van.
âIt sucked, because I wasnât prepared for it. I had to go sleep in a friendâs driveway,â he remembers. The forcefulness of the schoolâs response only made McNicholas more suspicious, bringing to mind Shakespeareâs famous line, âThe lady doth protest too much.â&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;

Institute of American Indian Arts Can't Ignore the First Amendment
Page (Two-Column)
Tell the Institute of American Indian Arts to lift sanctions against David McNicholas and revise its anti-bullying policy.
The situation escalated when the administration denied that the grant even existed during a meeting with McNicholas and other members of the Associated Student Government who had taken an interest in the matter. Despite the administrationâs denials, an anonymous source provided McNicholas with a photocopy of a grant award letter for the rumored $50,000. Armed with this evidence, McNicholas and the ASG president confronted the administration, only to face threats of legal action.
The administrationâs behavior took an emotional toll on students, according to McNicholas. One day, the ASG called a meeting to discuss the situation â just ASG members, since advisors employed by the college couldnât be trusted â and the ASG president showed up in tears. She had just come from a meeting with IAIA President Robert Martin, who delivered a shocking ultimatum.
âShe said that he told her the school was seriously considering suing ASG â and her â because of the bad publicity,â McNicholas says. "She came to us and said, âThey told me to fix it.â She was in tears, you know, and that made me mad.â&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;
When they confronted the provost with the grant award letter, he changed his tune.
âHe showed up at the next meeting and said, âOh, you know what? I did some looking, I researched it, and I think I found the grant that you guys were talking about, and Iâd like to come and explain how it was spent,ââ McNicholas recalls. âI was like, yeah, I bet you do.â
Meanwhile, Provost ColĂłnâs investigation of McNicholas for publishing the student critiques found him responsible for violating the schoolâs unconstitutional anti-bullying policy. Exhausted and beaten down, he was unable to attend the meeting where the provost attempted to explain the grantâs expenditures. McNicholas says, âI got the sheet he handed out, which showed budget-to-actual figures, but when pressed to release the ledger, he claimed bank statements might not go back that far. Weâre talking a year, maybe two at most. I think he thought you could say that because he was with a room full of like 19, 20 year olds. But if I had been in that room, I would have pushed back.â
Though McNicholas later successfully appealed the housing sanctions and recovered about $2,000 in lost fees, he remains outraged at how other students were treated.
McNicholas never did accept IAIAâs âas little as possibleâ philosophy, in which truth had no place, power thrived on silence, and the ones who dared to ask questions were the first to pay the price.
âWhat I really canât stand is that they did the same thing to a 19-year-old freshman for making an Instagram post. That person didnât move out on their own accord. They lost all their housing and meal plan money. They lost $2,000,â McNicholas says. âThey kicked that person out, kept their money, and made a 19-year-old student homeless. As far as Iâm concerned, thatâs unconscionable.â
Not only did the sanctions against McNicholas affect his ability to participate in campus life, they also threatened his employment opportunities, including a federal work-study opportunity that should have been protected from administrative interference.
âI was hired to be an orientation mentor at the end of last summer,â he says âAnd the day before I was going to start, I got a call from the director of that program who said, âYeah, you canât participate because youâre on institutional probation.ââ
Finding himself ruthlessly targeted by the administration, McNicholas turned to the press. Teaming up with a few peers, they went to the Santa Fe Reporter, and the â which detailed the administrationâs retaliatory actions against him â made an immediate impact.
âWhen that article came out, both the interim director and dean of students were gone within days,â he says. âLike, they were gone.â&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;

After the Santa Fe Reporter exposĂŠ and leadership shakeup, the food pantry miraculously transformed. A 20-foot-long conference table in the Student Success Center, once filled with nothing but cans of tomatoes that no one was using, suddenly became a bounty of groceries.
Last semester, McNicholas delved into the intersection of journalism and free speech through an independent study. His research included works like Dean Spadeâs âMutual Aidâ and FIREâs âGuide to Free Speech on Campus,â laying the groundwork for his evolving understanding of rights and responsibilities.
This semester, McNicholas has already published a new issue of The Young Warrior, which reflects his growing interest in matters of free expression. The issue includes a letter from ĂŰÖĎăĚŇ written on his behalf and a personal acknowledgment of his own rights and responsibilities as a journalist.
âYes, the school violated my rights and they need to be held accountable, but also, I could have been a better journalist. And thereâs room to talk about that,â he says with characteristic humility. The issue also strikes a lighter tone with a comic poking fun at the provost â because, as McNicholas says with a grin, âwhy not?â
The intersection of art, politics, and personal freedom is a driving force for McNicholas. âMy work is very personal,â he explains. âI live in a political morass metaphorically surrounded by people on both sides of a binary who think censorship is fine as long as itâs censoring the other guy. Iâm a non-binary thinker. Iâm an anarchist. For an artist like me to make art, I canât be worried about who I will offend. I canât tailor my work to thread between all these idiots who canât think for themselves, who canât be critical without taking sides. If I worried about that, I couldnât get up in the morning. I couldnât be an artist.â
McNicholas never did accept IAIAâs ââ philosophy, in which truth had no place, power thrived on silence, and the ones who dared to ask questions were the first to pay the price. Nevertheless, he speaks with deep affection about IAIA.
âI love this school. I love the community. I love the students and the faculty. I struggle with the administration after this, but I think that that struggle was there long before I came along. I just kind of exposed it.â
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