Rick Smith may refer to:
Rick Smith (born 1968) is a Canadian author and environmentalist. He is Executive Director of the Broadbent Institute and co-author, with Bruce Lourie, of Slow Death by Rubber Duck: How the Toxic Chemistry of Everyday Life Affects Our Health, a look at everyday pollutants and the ease with which they accumulate in the human body. To illustrate this issue Smith and Lourie experimented on their own bodies, raising and lowering levels of toxic chemicals in their blood and urine through the performance of common activities. The book was a bestseller in Canada and Australia and translated into 6 other languages. Their follow-up book Toxin Toxout: Getting Harmful Chemicals Out of Our Bodies and Our World was published by St. Martin's Press in 2013.
Smith is originally from Dorval, Quebec and spent his high school years in Richmond Hill, Ontario. He received his Ph.D in biology in 1999 from the University of Guelph. Throughout his university years Smith volunteered with a number of progressive organizations including serving as founding president of a new union for graduate students.
Richard Allan Smith (born June 29, 1948) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player. He played from 1968 until 1981 in the National Hockey League (NHL) and the World Hockey Association (WHA). He was a member of the 1970 Boston Bruins Stanley Cup champions.
Smith was originally drafted by the Boston Bruins in the second round (7th overall) in the 1966 NHL Amateur Draft. He played in Boston from 1968–69 to 1971–72. Boston traded him in 1972 to the California Golden Seals of the NHL. He played there until the end of the next season (1972–73) when he left the NHL for the World Hockey Association (WHA) and played for the Minnesota Fighting Saints. In 1975–76 Smith returned to the NHL to play for the St. Louis Blues. He would remain with the Blues until the 1976–77 NHL season when he returned to the Boston Bruins. In 1980 Rick Smith would leave Boston to play one more NHL season split between the Detroit Red Wings (11 games) and the Washington Capitals (40 games). He won the Stanley Cup with the Boston Bruins in 1970. Rick Smith was a steady defenseman, not a scorer but a reliable part of talented teams. An important part of winning Bruin teams who worked hard in every game he participated in.
In a crazy haze
In a purple robe
I walk amaze
King of the strobe
Flashing and unfaithful
I'm hardly light at all
Tripping and ungraceful
I was born into the fall
You knew
You knew
I've never been true
I'm true in You
You knew
At the stretch of dawn
In the yawn of time
You thought upon me
With Your bread and wine
But how my blood is hardened
I fear of losing life
Do drown me in Your heart and
Say I'll be Your wife
You knew
You knew
Before I was true
I was true in You