In this excerpt, Morton describes two incidents in Chapel Hill, North Carolina that Warren Ashby attributes to Frank Porter Graham in his book. According to Morton, whereas Ashby was not incorrect that Graham was involved in the incidents, the Fellowship of Southern Churchmen played a more prominent role in working with Graham than suggested by Ashby. The two incidents in question involved Kei Kenada, a Japanese American that Graham and the Fellowship helped get out of a relocation center and into school during World War II, and Dorothy Maynor, an African American opera singer that Graham and the Fellowship got to perform in front of an integrated audience in Chapel Hill. Her comments are revealing of the various ways in which the Fellowship worked with someone like Graham to promote tolerance and awareness.