No. Passports are only issued to individuals. Each person would need their own passport.
It is etiquette to put the wife's name first and inside the card put her name first and then the husbands (the deceased was his mother-in-law) so he should be included.
Just the one whose parent it was. Unless their spouse was extremely close to their inlaw.
Generally YES, you need to fill out various forms so that the processor of the passport will be able to know what to put on the passport.
do nice things for him so he wont be mad at you so he will be happy
Unfortunatly I believe so, that is what life insurance is for.
Yes and No. If the wife has a legal power of attorney signed over by you, which gives her the right to act on your behalf, then yes, she can open an account in the husbands name without him being present. If there is no power of attorney available, then No, the wife cannot open the account in the husbands name without him being present. Doing so would be illegal and considered forgery.
You cannot look in the passport. It is just a passport sign you can put up in your room so that others know you are [or were] a paid Member!!
Do you mean a Microsoft Passport Network (or .Net Passport as it was previously)? If so, this is the generic sign-in portal: http://login.passport.com
She had 3 husbands, so whatever
Yes, some husbands do feel uncomfortable around their wives after affair because some husbands feel remorse and are ashamed of hurting their wife and do not always know what to do to gain their wife's trust back while other husbands may simply be frustrated and angry at their wife for catching them cheating. Communication is one of the most powerful tools a couple can have so both should be able to express their feelings without getting into an argument and try to save their marriage.
No, if the wife is not an authorized user on the credit card then it does not affect the wife's credit report. So the late payment will only be on the husband credit report.
It is illegal for anyone to knowingly sign someone else's name without a power of attorney granting rights in which to do so.