Economics writer and popularizer William T Foster, in the course of discussing his extensive public speaking career, weighed in with his view of Henry George and his disciples. This was probably written in the late 1940s. It is from the Lee (his daughter) manuscript of his autobiography in the Reed College Special Collections. [Foster on George's disciples] Most forum questions, however, are old ones. One in particular I see coming a long way off. One noon at the Hungry Club in Pittsburgh - the liveliest luncheon club I have met - a man arose and began an apparently pointless question. I stopped him short. "Excuse me," I said, "but I think I see your question. You wish to ask whether all those ills would not be cured by the single tax." [Foster's view of Henry George] As an elector of the Hall of Fame during the past thirty years I have received hundreds of letters asking me to vote for Henry George. One of them came form my esteemed teacher, John Dewey. I could not vote as he asked me to vote. I am convinced that "Progress and Poverty," which vividly describes the economic ills which we still stupidly suffer, has done harm for the Single Tax has no chance of supplanting our present awful mess of taxes, and there are thousands of men who but for Henry George might be working for a feasible way out. Albert Himoe