In "Catch-22," Doc Daneeka is declared dead by the military due to bureaucratic absurdity and the dehumanizing nature of war. After a plane crash, he is listed among the casualties, despite being alive and well. This situation highlights the nonsensical rules of military bureaucracy, where the individual's reality is disregarded for the sake of paperwork and protocol. Ultimately, it serves to emphasize the themes of absurdity and the often arbitrary nature of life and death within the military system.
Being mentioned in a will certainly doesn't require someone to be declared dead. If they have passed, the will should specify how the excess is distributed.
Bon Jovi song called, dead or alive
It's called 'Wanted (dead or alive)' and is by Bon Jovi
If you have I Tunes search Bon Jovi and it will be the top song called "Wanted Dead or Alive" If you have I Tunes search Bon Jovi and it will be the top song called "Wanted Dead or Alive"
[SPOILER FOLLOWS] She's dead. I'd say it's pretty certain unless a big plot to catch someone involves her being pretend dead.
Any licensed physician can declare death.
If their heart, breathing, and brain activity have stopped, they are dead.
Your highschool teacher
No. The only persons who can declare a person dead are those who write death certificates; a medical practitioner or, in the absence of a body, a coroner.
On 1 May 1945.
Declare them both?
According to the chart, suffered the most military dead.
According to the chart, suffered the most military dead.
You dont once its dead its dead
that the 1960s-style federalism was dead
that the 1960s-style federalism was dead
I THINK it is about 7 years one has to wait before the person can be declared legally dead. Look in the related link below for more information on this.