-
It's been reported that he has not -- he's clammed up over the last few days.
WHITEHOUSE: Press Briefing
-
For long after the war, most Germans clammed up about the Nazi past.
ECONOMIST: Charlemagne
-
On one occasion, I tried to get her to say something about her husband, but she clammed up at that.
NEWYORKER: Clara
-
During the interviews, Keyes sometimes clammed up and threatened to stop talking if publicly identified as a suspect in the Curriers' murders.
WSJ: Trying to unlock secrets of dead serial killer
-
But when I steered the conversation to questions about President Bush's search for a new attorney general -- which was then in the final stages -- Bartlett politely clammed up.
CNN: Free from White House, former counselor tells tales
-
He agreed to a meeting in Europe, but then, not long after a reporter stepped off the plane, clammed up and became unavailable, owing to what his assistant claimed was a family emergency.
FORBES: The Cult Of JAR
-
In a political age when biography is destiny, Bush has not exactly clammed up on personal matters, detailing over time his history as a drinker, his religious conversion, his fidelity to his wife Laura.
CNN: 'I've made mistakes...'
-
Instead of responding with a medical report explaining his knee condition, which turned out to be a torn MCL, the Bears PR staff clammed up, and others wrote the story and made the team and the player look bad.
FORBES: Super Sunday? More Like Super Spin Day