Jeet Kune Do
Jeet Kune Do and Small Circle Jujitsu share a common developmental history

The founders of Small Circle Jujitsu and Jeet Kune Do were good friends who mutually admired each other's arts and talents. They also shared a student teacher relationship. Great Grandmaster Wally Jay taught Grandmaster Bruce Lee Judo and Jujitsu grappling techniques at his home dojo in Alameda, CA. Grandmaster Lee was beginning to incorporate some of this training into his movie choreography, as can be seen in his unfinished film, "Game of Death".
Together these two great martial artists discussed and examined principles, techniques, and approaches. This collaboration influenced the development of their respective arts/philosophies, Small Circle Jujitsu and Jeet Kune Do.
Professor James Hundon is the first person to bridge the historical connections between Small Circle Jujitsu and Jeet Kune Do. He has given groundbreaking seminars presenting techniques and approaches in common between the two, as well giving insight into their historical significance. His own philosophy of Dynamic Small Circle Ju Trap Boxing continually builds upon the foundation created by the blend of these two philosophies.
Professor Hundon has trained in Jun Fan, Small Circle Jujitsu, and Jeet Kune Do throughout his martial arts career. His earliest teachers, Newt Kamakani and Felix Macias, were both direct students of Grandmaster Bruce Lee. When Professor Hundon became a student of Great Grandmaster Jay in the 1970's, he already had a foundation in Jun Fan Concepts. Later on he trained with Sijo Leo T. Fong, a student and friend of Grandmaster Bruce Lee.
More recently, Professor Hundon is a certified Edged Weapons Instructor, a Full Instructor in Jeet Kune Do Concepts, and one of the Descendants of the Masters under Sigung Paul Vunak. He currently trains with Sifu Harinder Singh Sabharwal, Senior Training Officer of Progressive Fighting Systems, under Sigung Paul Vunak.
Descendants of the Masters website: http://www.fighting.net/jamesh