If the forgery charge against you was actually dismissed, then you were not convicted, and although the record of your arrest still exists so, also, does the record that the charges were dismissed.
It depends entirely on what job it is that you are applying for, and what the employment requirements of that particular institution are. If it is for any of the positions which require state licensing (RN - Pharmacy - X-Ray - etc) - depending on the seriousness of your record you may not be able to qualify for a state license. Best thing to do is simply apply and ask their Human Resources/Personnel Department.
If you were charged and found not guilty, then it should not matter.
It depends on the type of activity an individual was involved in. The decision to grant or deny licensure as an RN is in the hands of - I believe - the State Board of Nursing.
A California RN can only be an RN in California. However, if that same RN was to get registered to be an RN in a different state, they could work there as well.
Use 'a' before a consonant such as a RN Use 'an' before a vowel such as EOE
Yes you can. there are colleges that offer the RN completion program for LPN to RN.
The electron configuration of curium is [Rn]5f7.6d1.7s2.
Rn is the symbol for the noble gas, radon.
RN's
You have to have a specialized license and training to work as an RN.
You have to have a specialized license and training to work as an RN.
Yes, Rn is radon a radioactive nonmetal. But the symbol Rn does not stand for "radioactive nonmetal." Rn Radon has no stable isotopes, so yes it is always a radioactive nonmetal.