Sounds like something a megalomaniac Clintonite would do.
Via Campus Reform:
Donna Shalala, former Department of Health and Human Services secretary and outgoing President of the University of Miami, tried more than once to deny young female students a chance to organize a conservative club on campus.
Shalala’s past attempts to silence conservative activists is resurfacing amidst her new appointment to head-up the Clinton Foundation.
According to reports, the incident occurred during the 2002-03 academic year, during which Colleen Donovan, Andrea Kiser, Nathalia Gillot, and Sarah Canale founded a group called Advocates for Conservative Thought. In order to use university resources and facilities, the club had to be approved and registered with the Committee on Student Groups. However, the process did not occur as smoothly as they hoped it would.
The Committee on Student Groups denied the group approval three separate times—once in November 2002, again in December 2002, and again in January 2003. The Committee suggested that ACT would simply be a mirror of the College Republicans club that already existed on campus and adding another such club to the mix would be a poor use of university resources.
However, one of the group’s founders pointed out at the time that College Republicans endorse specific candidates and party policies; the club they sought to found would seek to sponsor lectures, distribute materials, and take part in “the exposition and promotion of conservative principles and ideas in society.” Indeed, some of ACT’s founders were Democrats who identified with many conservative beliefs.

