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PDF Editor FAQ

Is it legal to require a college student to sign a photography release form to participate in a course work? I’m completing an MSN to be a nurse practitioner. I've attended 2 other nursing programs and both allowed an opt out from the photo release.

I assume it’s for their brochures / website.What you could do is tell them you don’t want to be in any of the photos, videos, etc.Tell them it’s your religious preference. They won’t argue with that.

What is a 100% historical fact that will leave you baffled?

The Cardinal's Mistress“Women will pick up a romance novel knowing what to expect, and this foreknowledge of the reader is very important. When the hero and heroine meet and fall in love, maybe they don't know they're in love but the reader does. Then a conflict will draw them apart, but you know in the end they'll be back together, and preferably married or planning to be by page 192.— Joan Schulhafer of Pocket Books, 1982″[1][1][1][1]Benito Mussolini made an early name for himself as a journalist and political polemicist. An ardent anticleric, one of his most frequent targets was the Catholic Church, which he railed against in articles, essays and even a racy 1910 novel depicting a scandalous affair between a 17-century cardinal and his ill-fated mistress.[2][2][2][2]From his birth in Predappio, Italy in 1883, Mussolini grew to become a sterotypical problem child. He was in constant trouble for fighting and bullying other children, which eventually escalated to assault with a deadly weapon (pocket knife) in 1895[3][3][3][3] In 1892, Benito's parents sent him off to Catholic boarding school, to which he despised. He headed his first rebellion at only 10 years old, over the food being served in his school"s cafeteria.[4][4][4][4]Mussolini's childhood home (Benito Mussolini Biography: Italian Dictator & leader of the National Fascist Party)He was expelled from not one but two schools for stabbing other children, one a fellow classmate at a church-affiliated boarding school and the other his own girlfriend.[5][5][5][5] Mussolini led gangs of neighborhood boys who raided area farms and local businesses and even disrupted church services by pinching, poking, and inflicting pain on random members of the congregation.[6][6][6][6]While his mother, a school teacher, was religious, his father, a local blacksmith expressed the strong anti-religious views and Socialism that Benito would later trumpet.[7][7][7][7] He was raised in a region of northern Italy that was a hotbed of left-wing dissent, and his father was a radical journalist in his free time. By the time he was eight, Benito was spending long hours helping his father in the furnace.[8][8][8][8] Here he would listen to Alessandro’s socialist ideas and these were to mould his future philosophy.Alessandro Mussolini idolized 19th-century Italian nationalist figures with humanist tendencies such as Carlo Pisacane, Giuseppe Mazzini and Giuseppe Garibaldi.[9][9][9][9] His father's political outlook combined views of anarchist figures such as Carlo Cafiero and Mikhail Bakunin, the military authoritarianism of Garibaldi[10][10][10][10], and the nationalism of Mazzini. In 1902, at the anniversary of Garibaldi's death, Mussolini made a public speech in praise of the republican nationalist.[11][11][11][11]Benito Mussolini, age 9 (Childhood-Early Adult Life)A troubled youth with a history of violent incidents, Mussolini was also an avid reader and student. He worked briefly as a teacher but lost his job due to an affair and his constant fighting with the parents of his students.[12][12][12][12] Avoiding conscription, in July 1902, he crossed the border into Switzerland to escape military service; an offence he would later have people shot for when he became dictator.[13][13][13][13] Just 19 years old, the restless young man moved to Bern, Switzerland, where he was reduced to sleeping in parks and once again running afoul of the law for promoting a violent general strike, when he was arrested for the first (but certainly not the last) time.[14][14][14][14]Benito Mussolini's mug shot, 1903 - a picture from the pastFollowing in his father’s footsteps, Mussolini turned to journalism. He began submitting pieces to a Swiss-based, Italian-language Socialist newspaper, The Workers’ Future.[15][15][15][15] His articles proved popular, providing him with a regular source of income. He would also spend this time furthering his education, reading works by philosophers and political theorists, including Immanuel Kant, George Hegel and Friedrich Nietzsche.[16][16][16][16]Once again showing his father’s influence, Mussolini published an anti-clerical pamphlet, “Man and Divinity: God Does Not Exist,” in 1904, in which he mocked Christianity.[17][17][17][17] His willingness to play the provocateur paid off; within a few years his influence would expand, and he was asked to write for Socialist papers as far afield as New York. His mother’s illness and death brought Mussolini back to Italy in 1904 but didn’t stop his writing.[18][18][18][18] In additional to his political journalism, he dabbled in poetry, pamphlets short stories and essays, including one on Nietzsche’s work, which Mussolini claimed had a profound influence on him.[19][19][19][19]After once again leaving Italy, Mussolini settled in Trent, then under control of the Austro-Hungarian empire, but with a large Italian ex-pat community.[20][20][20][20] He worked as the secretary for a local trade union, but publicizing his incendiary belief that Trent belonged to Italy, not Austria-Hungry in the Socialist paper Il Popolo got him deported back to Italy.[21][21][21][21] But he continued his relationship with the paper, which began to publish regular, serialized installments of his latest work. Mussolini returned to Italy where he edited a socialist newspaper at Forli, becoming editor of Avanti, the leading socialist newspaper in Italy in 1912.[22][22][22][22]Mussolini, Benito Postcards Italian Leader National Fascist Party Post CardsThe Cardinal’s Mistress (1909), serialized in the socialist newspaper Il Popolo under the original title Claudia Particella, l’Amante del Cardinale: Grande Romanzo dei Tempi del Cardinale Emanuel Madruzzo.[23][23][23][23] Mussolini would later claim that he had based the premise of The Cardinal’s Mistress on true events.Writing hastily at night with the assistance of Santi Corvaja, a fellow Italian journalist[24][24][24][24] , as he churned out pages for some much-needed cash, Mussolini depicts an illicit affair between Emanuel Madruzzo, 17th century Cardinal of Trent, and his mistress, Claudia Particella.[25][25][25][25] The affair becomes public, and when the pope refuses to allow the cardinal to marry, a series of plot twists leave his niece (and only heir) dead, his mistress fatally poisoned after spurning the advances of a nefarious nobleman and the cardinal devastated and alone.In between, Mussolini fits in a centuries-long history of Catholic religious figures behaving badly, featuring secret families, unsanctioned marriages and accusations of homosexuality.[26][26][26][26] The book’s subject matter and frank language might not be too shocking to modern eyes, but it certainly is lurid, with scenes depicting self-flagellation, masturbation and even fantasies of rape.[27][27][27][27] Released between January and May 1910, it proved to be briefly popular with Italian readers, especially as Mussolini’s political and journalistic star was on the rise.The novel was written rather carelessly, with a wandering plot, suggesting that Mussolini’s only interest in the characters was to place them in a historical setting that provided “an excuse for lengthy anti-clerical rants, and to portray the lust, vengefulness and murderousness of their adversaries”.[28][28][28][28]The book’s historic value comes not from the crafted prose of journalist, but in providing an intimate insight to Mussolini's ongoing fascination with Fascism and underming the authority of the Catholic Church.By 1912, he became an executive of Italy’s Socialist party and editor of its largest Socialist newspaper. He tripled its circulation with his radical bromides against imperialism, capitalism and, of course, religion — publishing a biography of Jan Hus, the 15th century Czech religious dissenter-turned martyr who was burned at the stake by the Catholic Church.[29][29][29][29] He would remain a writer for the rest of his life, with his works eventually comprising more than 54 volumes of written material.[30][30][30][30]Benito Mussolini's novel, 'The Cardinal's Mistress' (Mussolini Wrote a Little-Known "Romance" Novel)By then, Mussolini had abandoned his earlier Socialist ideas for a bombastic, brawny and often violent form of Nationalism.[31][31][31][31] After several years of rising tensions and threats, his Italian Fascists seized power in 1922, and Mussolini became prime minister, establishing totalitarian control of the country.[32][32][32][32]Despite evidence of Mussolini’s growing suppression of civil liberties, many in the West gave him their tacit approval, lauding his attempts at organizing and modernizing a country that had suffered economic and political unrest in the post-World War I years.[33][33][33][33] In 1923, Time magazine put the dictator on their cover (as they would later do with Adolph Hitler in 1938, naming him Man of the Year).[34][34][34][34]But others saw through “Il Duce’s” swagger, including writer and critic Dorothy Parker. Mussolini’s novel had seemingly been forgotten, before being resurrected and translated into English by Hiram Motherwell in 1928, to capitalize on Mussolini’s fame.[35][35][35][35] When Parker reviewed the book for the September 15, 1928 issue of The New Yorker, she turned her acid pen against her fellow “writer,” attacking its purple prose and scattershot plotting, claiming that despite locking herself in her apartment she could not even force herself to finish the book.[36][36][36][36]Mussolini reading excerpts from The Cardinal's Mistress to Italian soldiers (The Cardinal’s Mistress)By the time of its English-language publication, Mussolini himself had dismissed the book, reportedly saying it was nothing more than “a novel for seamstresses and scandal.”[37][37][37][37] And while he hadn’t dismissed his anti-religious views, political expediency forced him into negotiations with the Catholic Church.For decades, the Church had refused to recognize the legitimacy of the Italian government over the separation between Church and State.[38][38][38][38] Mussolini, meanwhile, knew that he had to appease Italy’s large Catholic majority. In 1929, the two sides agreed to a pact, known as the Lateran Treaty.[39][39][39][39] Although Mussolini believed that the treaty would bring the Catholic Church under his control, in reality, it made the Church even more powerful.Among the concessions it negotiated was recognition of Vatican City as a sovereign nation under control of the Pope, mandatory religious instruction in Italian schools and the outlawing of divorce.[40][40][40][40] And there was another unwritten understanding between the Church and the dictator — The Cardinal’s Mistress was to be removed from the shelves.[41][41][41][41] The book soon faded into obscurity before being re-released in the 1950s[42][42][42][42] , more than a decade after Mussolini’s death.Footnotes[1] EXPANDING ROMANCE MARKET[1] EXPANDING ROMANCE MARKET[1] EXPANDING ROMANCE MARKET[1] EXPANDING ROMANCE MARKET[2] The Cardinal's Mistress[2] The Cardinal's Mistress[2] The Cardinal's Mistress[2] The Cardinal's Mistress[3] Benito Mussolini[3] Benito Mussolini[3] Benito Mussolini[3] Benito Mussolini[4] Benito Mussolini Biography: Italian Dictator & leader of the National Fascist Party[4] Benito Mussolini Biography: Italian Dictator & leader of the National Fascist Party[4] Benito Mussolini Biography: Italian Dictator & leader of the National Fascist Party[4] Benito Mussolini Biography: Italian Dictator & leader of the National Fascist Party[5] Childhood-Early Adult Life [5] Childhood-Early Adult Life [5] Childhood-Early Adult Life [5] Childhood-Early Adult Life [6] Benito Mussolini Biography: Italian Dictator & leader of the National Fascist Party[6] Benito Mussolini Biography: Italian Dictator & leader of the National Fascist Party[6] Benito Mussolini Biography: Italian Dictator & leader of the National Fascist Party[6] Benito Mussolini Biography: Italian Dictator & leader of the National Fascist Party[7] Benito Mussolini Biography[7] Benito Mussolini Biography[7] Benito Mussolini Biography[7] Benito Mussolini Biography[8] Remembering Mussolini[8] Remembering Mussolini[8] Remembering Mussolini[8] Remembering Mussolini[9] http://Gregor, Anthony James (1979). Young Mussolini and the intellectual origins of fascism. Berkeley and Los Angeles, California; London, England: University of California Press.[9] http://Gregor, Anthony James (1979). Young Mussolini and the intellectual origins of fascism. Berkeley and Los Angeles, California; London, England: University of California Press.[9] http://Gregor, Anthony James (1979). Young Mussolini and the intellectual origins of fascism. Berkeley and Los Angeles, California; London, England: University of California Press.[9] http://Gregor, Anthony James (1979). Young Mussolini and the intellectual origins of fascism. Berkeley and Los Angeles, California; London, England: University of California Press.[10] Authoritarianism[10] Authoritarianism[10] Authoritarianism[10] Authoritarianism[11] Breaking News, Analysis, Politics, Blogs, News Photos, Video, Tech Reviews - TIME.com[11] Breaking News, Analysis, Politics, Blogs, News Photos, Video, Tech Reviews - TIME.com[11] Breaking News, Analysis, Politics, Blogs, News Photos, Video, Tech Reviews - TIME.com[11] Breaking News, Analysis, Politics, Blogs, News Photos, Video, Tech Reviews - TIME.com[12] The first jobs of 12 dictators[12] The first jobs of 12 dictators[12] The first jobs of 12 dictators[12] The first jobs of 12 dictators[13] Benito Mussolini's mug shot, 1903 - a picture from the past[13] Benito Mussolini's mug shot, 1903 - a picture from the past[13] Benito Mussolini's mug shot, 1903 - a picture from the past[13] Benito Mussolini's mug shot, 1903 - a picture from the past[14] Benito Mussolini's mug shot, 1903 - a picture from the past[14] Benito Mussolini's mug shot, 1903 - a picture from the past[14] Benito Mussolini's mug shot, 1903 - a picture from the past[14] Benito Mussolini's mug shot, 1903 - a picture from the past[15] The future is socialism, but it must be fought for[15] The future is socialism, but it must be fought for[15] The future is socialism, but it must be fought for[15] The future is socialism, but it must be fought for[16] Benito Mussolini[16] Benito Mussolini[16] Benito Mussolini[16] Benito Mussolini[17] The Church, Mussolini and Fascism - CNA Columns: Inside the Church during WWII[17] The Church, Mussolini and Fascism - CNA Columns: Inside the Church during WWII[17] The Church, Mussolini and Fascism - CNA Columns: Inside the Church during WWII[17] The Church, Mussolini and Fascism - CNA Columns: Inside the Church during WWII[18] Rosa Maltoni - Wikipedia[18] Rosa Maltoni - Wikipedia[18] Rosa Maltoni - Wikipedia[18] Rosa Maltoni - Wikipedia[19] Nietzsche, Godfather of Fascism?: On the Uses and Abuses of a Philosophy[19] Nietzsche, Godfather of Fascism?: On the Uses and Abuses of a Philosophy[19] Nietzsche, Godfather of Fascism?: On the Uses and Abuses of a Philosophy[19] Nietzsche, Godfather of Fascism?: On the Uses and Abuses of a Philosophy[20] Benito Mussolini- For we were young and we had wings[20] Benito Mussolini- For we were young and we had wings[20] Benito Mussolini- For we were young and we had wings[20] Benito Mussolini- For we were young and we had wings[21] ITALIAN PAPER HITS JEWS; Mussolini's Popolo d'Italia Blames Them for Anti-Semitism.[21] ITALIAN PAPER HITS JEWS; Mussolini's Popolo d'Italia Blames Them for Anti-Semitism.[21] ITALIAN PAPER HITS JEWS; Mussolini's Popolo d'Italia Blames Them for Anti-Semitism.[21] ITALIAN PAPER HITS JEWS; Mussolini's Popolo d'Italia Blames Them for Anti-Semitism.[22] Benito Mussolini- For we were young and we had wings[22] Benito Mussolini- For we were young and we had wings[22] Benito Mussolini- For we were young and we had wings[22] Benito Mussolini- For we were young and we had wings[23] Mussolini’s Romance Novel[23] Mussolini’s Romance Novel[23] Mussolini’s Romance Novel[23] Mussolini’s Romance Novel[24] Santi Corvaja - Wikipedia[24] Santi Corvaja - Wikipedia[24] Santi Corvaja - Wikipedia[24] Santi Corvaja - Wikipedia[25] The Cardinal’s Mistress[25] The Cardinal’s Mistress[25] The Cardinal’s Mistress[25] The Cardinal’s Mistress[26] Mussolini Wrote a Little-Known "Romance" Novel[26] Mussolini Wrote a Little-Known "Romance" Novel[26] Mussolini Wrote a Little-Known "Romance" Novel[26] Mussolini Wrote a Little-Known "Romance" Novel[27] The Cardinal's Mistress[27] The Cardinal's Mistress[27] The Cardinal's Mistress[27] The Cardinal's Mistress[28] Mussolini’s Romance Novel[28] Mussolini’s Romance Novel[28] Mussolini’s Romance Novel[28] Mussolini’s Romance Novel[29] John Huss[29] John Huss[29] John Huss[29] John Huss[30] Constructing Fascist Identity: Benito Mussolini and the Myth of "Romanità"[30] Constructing Fascist Identity: Benito Mussolini and the Myth of "Romanità"[30] Constructing Fascist Identity: Benito Mussolini and the Myth of "Romanità"[30] Constructing Fascist Identity: Benito Mussolini and the Myth of "Romanità"[31] Militarism and Nationalism [31] Militarism and Nationalism [31] Militarism and Nationalism [31] Militarism and Nationalism [32] The fascist movement that has brought Mussolini back to the mainstream[32] The fascist movement that has brought Mussolini back to the mainstream[32] The fascist movement that has brought Mussolini back to the mainstream[32] The fascist movement that has brought Mussolini back to the mainstream[33] Constitutional Rights Foundation[33] Constitutional Rights Foundation[33] Constitutional Rights Foundation[33] Constitutional Rights Foundation[34] TIME Magazine Cover: Benito Mussolini - Aug. 6, 1923[34] TIME Magazine Cover: Benito Mussolini - Aug. 6, 1923[34] TIME Magazine Cover: Benito Mussolini - Aug. 6, 1923[34] TIME Magazine Cover: Benito Mussolini - Aug. 6, 1923[35] Mussolini | Harper's Magazine[35] Mussolini | Harper's Magazine[35] Mussolini | Harper's Magazine[35] Mussolini | Harper's Magazine[36] Reading and Writing[36] Reading and Writing[36] Reading and Writing[36] Reading and Writing[37] Mussolini 1883-1915[37] Mussolini 1883-1915[37] Mussolini 1883-1915[37] Mussolini 1883-1915[38] 'Pope And Mussolini' Tells The 'Secret History' Of Fascism And The Church[38] 'Pope And Mussolini' Tells The 'Secret History' Of Fascism And The Church[38] 'Pope And Mussolini' Tells The 'Secret History' Of Fascism And The Church[38] 'Pope And Mussolini' Tells The 'Secret History' Of Fascism And The Church[39] How the Lateran Treaty made the Catholic Church into a state[39] How the Lateran Treaty made the Catholic Church into a state[39] How the Lateran Treaty made the Catholic Church into a state[39] How the Lateran Treaty made the Catholic Church into a state[40] https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://www.vaticanstate.va/en/state-government/judicial-governing-bodies/laws-and-decrees.html%3Fdownload%3D127:the-lateran-treaty-the-lateran-treaty&ved=2ahUKEwi0xOj84urnAhXFqp4KHbcwDqsQFjAvegQIBRAB&usg=AOvVaw19lvqGSYxTIhznAeIrskfs&cshid=1582567459160[40] https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://www.vaticanstate.va/en/state-government/judicial-governing-bodies/laws-and-decrees.html%3Fdownload%3D127:the-lateran-treaty-the-lateran-treaty&ved=2ahUKEwi0xOj84urnAhXFqp4KHbcwDqsQFjAvegQIBRAB&usg=AOvVaw19lvqGSYxTIhznAeIrskfs&cshid=1582567459160[40] https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://www.vaticanstate.va/en/state-government/judicial-governing-bodies/laws-and-decrees.html%3Fdownload%3D127:the-lateran-treaty-the-lateran-treaty&ved=2ahUKEwi0xOj84urnAhXFqp4KHbcwDqsQFjAvegQIBRAB&usg=AOvVaw19lvqGSYxTIhznAeIrskfs&cshid=1582567459160[40] https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://www.vaticanstate.va/en/state-government/judicial-governing-bodies/laws-and-decrees.html%3Fdownload%3D127:the-lateran-treaty-the-lateran-treaty&ved=2ahUKEwi0xOj84urnAhXFqp4KHbcwDqsQFjAvegQIBRAB&usg=AOvVaw19lvqGSYxTIhznAeIrskfs&cshid=1582567459160[41] The Leap of Faith[41] The Leap of Faith[41] The Leap of Faith[41] The Leap of Faith[42] Settlements in the Americas[42] Settlements in the Americas[42] Settlements in the Americas[42] Settlements in the Americas

Why do schools punish kids for recording fights?

The primary reason is that the school, as a legal entity, has a responsibility to protect all the students, including the ones not in the fight.There are some students who don’t have photo release forms on file. Or who have been removed from homes and who legally can’t have their pictures released.For example, our school has at least one student that teachers aren’t allowed to acknowledge that he legally exists, and no contact with parents is mandated by court order. Were a student to record a fight and release it on the internet, and this kid was in the video, then the school would be liable for breaking the legal mandate to not acknowledge his location in the community.It’s not about the fight at all, but the privacy of the entire school population.

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