Julian Bond: The meaning of the movement - Facing South

jpg [filepath] => sites/default/files/images/D_Julian_Bond_UVA2. jpg [filemime] => image/jpeg [filesize] => 12028 [status] => 1 [timestamp] => 1440099123 [list] => 1 [data] => Array ( [focus_rect] => [crop_rect] => [alt] => [title] => ) [nid] => 13006 [view] => ) --> After serving as the "publicity guy" for the... Special Collections ). Civil rights veteran Julian Bond, who died on Aug. 15, 2015, was one of the founders of the Institute for Southern Studies, and the Institute maintained a close relationship with Bond over the years. In 1975, Bob Hall and Sue Thrasher — who collaborated with Bond in the formative years of the Institute in the early 1970s — interviewed Bond for Southern Exposure magazine. The interview, an excerpted version of which appears below, offers a detailed, first-person account of Bond's entry into the 1960s civil rights struggle and his evolving views about the lessons and legacy of the movement. Source: www.southernstudies.org