"John Rundle Cornish" was an Anglican bishop, the inaugural Bishop of St Germans from 1905 to 1918.

Born on 7 October 1837 he was educated at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, where he was 14th Wrangler (University of Cambridge)/Wrangler in 1859. He was a Lecturer then Fellow at the College before studying for ordination. His subsequent appointments included a period as Vicar of Kenwyn, the post of Dean (religion)/Principal of Truro Training College and Archdeacon of Cornwall before a 15 year stint as a Suffragan Bishop as the inaugural Bishop of St Germans. He died on 20 April 1918 and a school (the Bishop Cornish C of E VA Primary School) in the locality is named after him. After Cornish's death the bishopric of St Germans remained dormant for 56 years.

More John Cornish on Wikipedia.

We'd be very, very interested in holding a tournament to commemorate the watershed event in American golf, the 1913 U.S. Open, ... If the USGA saw fit to invite us to hold the Open and it could be done in a manner that was acceptable to The Country Club, we'd welcome it.

There are just so many pieces of it that right now arent right.

Well deal with it.

We discovered that 24 players at the Ryder Cup used the range more than the 150 players at the 1988 U.S. Open, ... We're all in agreement that we can't use the range that we used in '88 and '99.

There hasnt been a slot machine assigned yet. They have the cart before the horse on this.

He's right, too. We haven't had any discussions.

I don't know if the governor is as in touch with the communities as he thinks he is sometimes.

Everybody would like to have real estate tax reduction including myself and the school board members.

Im not going to be the one to prognosticate that.