He saw another of the generation of moral crusaders: a girl with a blue skirt and a brown sweater, wearing white tennis shoes.
One of the nation's pre-eminent moral crusaders, Mr. Bennett acknowledged that he had set a poor example by "too much gambling."
The paper ridiculed Crick for presenting himself as a moral crusader when his own behaviour was unethical.
Similarly the moral crusaders, newspaper proprietors and muck-raking journalists should be called off.
The company also released no editor names nor company contact info, out of fear there would be backlashes and hate mail from "moral crusaders."
"I'm into politics and the well-being of society," he said, but not enough to want to reinvent himself as a moral crusader.
The depiction of the prosecutor as a dowdy moral crusader does not take distancing quotes.
Soon moral crusaders blamed comic books as a cause of poor grades, juvenile delinquency, drug use.
One of them is Anthony Comstock, the late-19th-century moral crusader, who gave his name to a series of state and national laws regulating "obscenity."
But last year, a tornado almost accomplished what years of moral crusaders could not, and nearly destroyed Miss Laura's.