Yes, the Apollo space project was a significant part of the American effort to send people to space. It culminated in the successful Apollo 11 mission in 1969, which landed the first humans on the Moon.
No, the Apollo Program was cancelled after the final moon landing (Apollo 17) in December 1972.
No, M and M's are not travelling to space!
Apollo 10 holds the record for the highest speed attained by a manned vehicle (39, 897 kph). Apollo 10 was the first mission broadcast in colour from space. The lunar module for Apollo 10 is still in space (orbiting the sun) - all the others crashed into the moon or burnt up in the Earth's atmosphere.
No they were not changed they were part of the Space suit, those boots were still there.
No, Apollo 5 was an unmanned mission and was designed to test the lunar module in Earth orbit. The mission took place in January 1968, and the spacecraft reentered Earth's atmosphere and burned up during reentry.
NASA was still a young agency when Apollo was introduced. The first space program was Mercury, whose mission was to launch astronauts, one at a time, into space and then into orbit. Following Mercury was the Gemini program. Gemini spacecraft held two astronauts and saw was the first to really start with science and gear experiments. It was during Gemini that Ed White became the first American to perform an EVA (spacewalk). Apollo directly followed Gemini, and the Space Shuttle program followed Apollo.
In Greek myth, Apollo did not die.
in 1982 M&M's traveled to space and have been on every mission ever since they first traveled to space and that's all
The first human being to step onto the moon ... Neil Armstrong ... was a civilian at the time, and still is.
It hasn't ended. People are still traveling by train today.
Abe Silverstein as chairman of the Silverstein Committee was in charge of organizing NASA, hired the initial engineers and scientists, was NASA's first director of space flight programs, planned Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, and the Centaur rocket, was responsible for NASA adopting the liquid hydrogen rocket engine which is still in use today, and named Mercury and Apollo.