While at Harvard, Smith played fullback on the football team under coach Dick Harlow.
Critics said the current (appointed) senator, Ben Smith who was a close friend of the Kennedy family, was intended all along to simply be a "seat-warmer" until Ted Kennedy turned thirty (the minimum age provided by the U.S. Constitution for eligibility to serve in the Senate).
Benjamin Franklin | Benjamin Britten | Will Smith | Benjamin Harrison | Kevin Smith | Adam Smith | Benjamin Disraeli | Smith College | Patti Smith | Michael W. Smith | Benjamin Netanyahu | Walter Benjamin | Chad Smith | Ian Smith | Fort Smith, Arkansas | Anna Nicole Smith | Kiki Smith | Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby | Alexander McCall Smith | Stan Smith | Benjamin West | Tommie Smith | David Smith | Bessie Smith | Roger Smith | Maggie Smith | Kate Smith | Fort Smith | Benjamin Zephaniah | Al Smith |
At a panel of the 1939 Writers' Congress, which also included Aunt Molly Jackson, Earl Robinson, and Alan Lomax, Botkin spoke of what writers had to gain from folklore: "He gains a point of view. The satisfying completeness and integrity of folk art derives from its nature as a direct response of the artist to a group and group experience with which he identifies himself and for which he speaks."
Rogge helped produce, and narrated, a documentary on Adam Smith that was funded by Liberty Fund.
He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1878 to the Forty-sixth Congress.
Jonathan F. Barrett was the company's first president, and the company included some of the leading men of the state: General Sherman himself, Hugh McLeod, John G. Tod, John Angier, William Rice, Ebenezer A. Allen, William A. van Alstyne, James H. Stevens, Benjamin A. Shepherd, and William J. Hutchins.
Upon Lomax's departure this work was continued by Benjamin A. Botkin, who succeeded Lomax as the Project's folklore editor in 1938, and at the Library in 1939, resulting in the invaluable compendium of authentic slave narratives: Lay My Burden Down: A Folk History of Slavery, edited by B. A. Botkin (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1945).
In 1998 and 2000 Feiner ran unsuccessfully as the Democratic candidate for New York's 20th congressional district, losing to the long-time incumbent Congressman, Benjamin A. Gilman.
Moriarty was elected to the Assembly on November 8, 2005, filling the seat of fellow Democrat Robert J. Smith II, who did not run for re-election and had held the seat in the Assembly since 2000.