Perseus used her severed head to turn Atlas to stone. Later he rescued princess Andromeda from being eaten by a sea monster, which Perseus also turned to stone.
From most of the myths I have read I am guessing no.
There is no proof that Medusa could not help but to turn people to stone.
try this. 7GH765654ID
try to turn it over and take out the battery
Medusa was a dangerous monster, her gaze turned everything to stone. King Polydectes wanted Perseus out of the way so he could try and seduce Perseus' mother Danaë. So Polydectes sent Perseus on this dangerous mission, but with the help of Hermes and thena he went through with it. He cut off her head!
try this. 7GH765654ID
Most people that are trying to learn good english turn to Rosetta Stone. Rosetta Stone is a well known language learning program. I would recommend giving that a try first because I know that Rosetta Stone is a great quality language learning tool.
It took 22 years to decipher the Rosetta Stone.22 years
To have people try to pull out the sword to become king.
hitting her with a tree branch.
Yes, there are various books featuring or referencing the myth of Medusa. Some examples include "Medusa the Mean" by Joan Holub, "Monsters: Medusa" by Bernard Evslin, and "Medusa's Gaze and Vampire's Bite: The Science of Monsters" by Matt Kaplan.
She ran there to try to get away from him. It didn't work as well as she had hoped, and once he was done with her, Athena was so angered that it had happened in her temple that she turned Medusa into a monster (never mind the fact that it wasn't actually Medusa's fault.)
after the adrenalin dodge grapple of it's shield and pick it up and face them when they try to turn you to stone