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Yost
Yost may refer to: Buildings in the United States *Yost Ice Arena, the University of Michigan ice hockey arena *Yost Theater, a historic theater in Santa Ana, California * Yost Tavern Historic old tavern on the National Register of Historic Places, Montgomery, Ohio Places in the United States * Yost, Utah, (Box Elder County) an unincorporated community (formerly incorporated- August 19, 1935-January 6, 1984) *Yost, Virginia, (Bath County) an unincorporated community * Yost, Ohio, an unincorporated community * Yosts, New York, (Montgomery County) an unincorporated community * Yostville, Pennsylvania, (Lackawanna County) an unincorporated community Other uses * Yost (surname), a surname, including a list of people with this name *Yošt, a character in Iranian mythology who defeated Axtya *Rollover cable, also called a Yost cable See also * Jost Jost is both a German given name and a surname and a Jewish (Ashkenazi) surname. Notable people with the name include: Given name ...
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Yost Ice Arena
Yost Ice Arena, formerly the Fielding H. Yost Field House, is an indoor ice hockey arena located on the campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. It is the home of the Michigan men's ice hockey team. Yost Field House opened in 1923 and was the home of the Michigan men's basketball team until the Crisler Center opened in 1967. It was converted into an ice arena in 1973 and has been home of the men's ice hockey team since then. It also has been the home of Michigan's women's ice hockey club team since its establishment in 1994. History Built in 1923 as a field house, the facility is named in honor of Michigan's longtime football coach and athletic director, Fielding H. Yost. For many years, it housed the men's basketball team until it relocated to the larger Crisler Arena in 1967. It also housed the track teams until 1973. In 1973, it was converted into an ice arena, replacing the outdated Michigan Coliseum, and the Michigan hockey team has used it since. Th ...
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Yost Theater
The Yost Theater is a concert and events venue in Santa Ana, California. It is a National Register of Historic Places-listed building located in Santa Ana's Downtown Historic District. Under the ownership of the Olivos Family it became a movie house for the Golden Age of Mexican Cinema. In recent years it housed various church organizations and underwent renovation in 2007. It is currently an event venue that hosts such functions as concerts, Ted Talks, school dances, and weddings. History The Yost first opened as the "Auditorium Theater" in 1913. It then was renamed the "Clune's Santa Ana Theater" the same year. It was not until Ed Yost purchased the theater that it acquired the name, Yost Theater. In 1950 the theater was leased to Luis Olivos, father of Louie Olivos Jr. The theater housed vaudeville, silent films, and talkies before it became a Mexican cinema house under the Olivos Family. Louie Olivos Jr. brought talent of Mexican cinema to the Yost including Antonio Agu ...
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Yost Tavern
The Yost Tavern is a historic former inn in the city of Montgomery, Ohio, United States. Built in 1805, when Montgomery was founded, it remained in operation as a lodging establishment until a long period of use as a house, and it was donated to the city after being owned by the local Kiwanis chapter. It has also been named a historic site. Abraham Yost both lived and operated a tavern in the building, and his business flourished because of its location along the highway to Cincinnati.Landmarks
City of Montgomery, 2015. Accessed 2015-07-03.
He built the structure in 1805, the year in which the village of Montgomery was incorporated. Within four years, Columbus-bound traffic was causing business to boom; Yost's customers purchased more than fift ...
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Yost, Utah
Yost is an unincorporated community located in northwestern Box Elder County, Utah, United States, on the north central slopes of the Raft River Mountains, some northwest of Brigham City. Description The first name for the area was "George Creek" for a man named George Eddy Sanderson, an early range rider who came to the area with Charles Yost from the Nevada Territory. Charles Yost remained in the area, becoming postmaster in 1887. After Yost built his cabin, he lived alone until he married Maria Larsen from Terrace, Utah, on the south side of the mountains. For four years she was the only woman living in Yost. Yost was later settled by other pioneer homesteaders. By 1910 the population had increased to 251 people. The town had a schoolhouse and church built. Yost incorporated on August 19, 1935, during the Great Depression. At the time, Yost's boundaries were the largest in area in the state of Utah. However, due to poor land quality for farming and ranch A ranch (f ...
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Yost, Virginia
Yost is an unincorporated community in Bath County, Virginia, in the United States The United States of America (USA), also known as the United States (U.S.) or America, is a country primarily located in North America. It is a federal republic of 50 U.S. state, states and a federal capital district, Washington, D.C. The 48 .... References * Unincorporated communities in Bath County, Virginia Unincorporated communities in Virginia {{BathCountyVA-geo-stub ...
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Yosts, New York
Mohawk is a town in Montgomery County, New York, United States. The population was 3,572 at the 2020 census, down from 3,844 in 2010. The town is on the northern border of the county, west of Amsterdam. The county seat, Fonda, is in Mohawk. History Jesuit missionaries entered the region from Quebec around 1642 to work among the Mohawk people. The principal village of the Mohawk was Caughnawaga, which was later developed as the site of Fonda. The area that became Mohawk was settled around 1725 by colonists from the English/Dutch region to the east around Albany. The Mohawk District, which became the original town of Mohawk, was created in March 1772 by Sir William Johnson when Tryon County was split off from Albany County. It was the easternmost of five districts in the new county, which eastern boundary ran north from the Delaware River at the Pennsylvania line through present Schoharie County to a north–south line that now forms the eastern boundaries of Montgomery, ...
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Yost (surname)
Yost is an anglicized spelling of the Dutch name "Joost" or German surname "Jost". __NOTOC__ Notable people Government * Charles Woodruff Yost (1907–1981), American diplomat * Dave Yost (born 1956), American lawyer and politician and Ohio State Attorney General *Ellis Asby Yost (1872-1962), American lawyer and West Virginia state senator for whom the prohibitionist "Yost Law" of 1913 is named - married to Lenna Lowe Yost, president of both the WVa Woman's Christian Temperance Union and the WVa Equal Suffrage Association * Jacob Senewell Yost (1801–1872), American politician and Pennsylvania Representative * Jacob Yost (Virginia congressman) (1853–1933), American politician and Virginia Representative * Joseph R. Yost (born 1986), American politician, Virginia state delegate * Paul A. Yost Jr. (1929–2022), American Coast Guard Commandant * Thomas B.Yost, Federal Judge -United States Environmental Protection Agency Media * Casper Yost (1864–1941), American newspaper editor ...
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Axtya
In Zoroastrian mythology, Axtya, also spelt Akhtya or Axt (, ), is an evil sorcerer and an opponent of the religion, known for killing those who were not able to answer his riddles. There is a mention of him in the Avesta, where the hero Yōišta of the Fryāna family (Middle Persian: ') performs a sacrifice to the goddess Aredvi Sura Anahita, who grants him the boon of being able to answer Axtya's 99 questions. This story is elaborated at greater length in the mediaevalThe main manuscript that the English translation was made from, dates from the 14th century . Pahlavi text '. There Axtya threatens to destroy a certain city unless a righteous man comes out and solves his riddles. Yōšt steps forward for this task, and with some divine assistance manages to answer all of Axtya's 33 questions, after which he asks three questions of his own. Unable to answer them, Axtya seeks help from Ahriman, who refuses to reveal the answers. Axtya then admits defeat and is ritually slain by Yosht. ...
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Rollover Cable
Rollover or roll over may refer to: Arts and entertainment * Rollover (film), ''Rollover'' (film), a 1981 American political thriller *''Roll Over'', a 1992 album by Hound Dog (band), Hound Dog * "Roll Over", a 2006 song by Zico Chain * "Roll Over", a 1989 song by Steven Wayne Horton * Roll Over (Thompson Twins song), "Roll Over" (Thompson Twins song), 1985 Computing * Rollover (key), the ability of a computer keyboard to handle several simultaneous keystrokes * Rollover cable, a cable used to connect a computer to a router Finance * Rollover (finance) * Rollover (foreign exchange) * Rollover IRA, a type of individual retirement account in the U.S. Other uses * Rollover (fire), a stage of a structure fire * Rollover, the former name of Gilchrist, Texas, U.S. **Rollover Pass * Roll Over, a park ride by Mondial (amusement ride manufacturer) * Dynamic rollover, a helicopter's susceptibility to roll when close to the ground * Vehicle rollover, a type of vehicular crash in which a v ...
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