See link(s) for details of all moon landings with crew.
In Canada a landed immigrant has permanent resident status. Until they achieve that status they are not landed.
The astronauts have to wait until they come home to wash their hands. There aren't any faucets or running water on space shuttles.
Nothing of significance. Viking 1 and Viking 2 landed in 1976 and after that there were no Mars missions until 1988.
put their penis in a whole. it gives them an erection and wanks them until they ejaculate
Astronauts cannot shower and use the bathroom the way that we do on earth. Astronauts have to reuse the water.
Of course. Edwin Aldrin landed with him, and Michael Collins waited for them out in the car, circling the block until they were finished and ready to leave.
No, Native American's did not have or use 'last names' (Surnames) until they were forced to do so by the American Government. Since then many Native American's have adopted other names they knew, or stuck with traditional nouns (names).
There are no pictures of this since the camera wasn't invented until 1830 four hundred years after his landing. You might find a drawing or painting of what someone thought it looked like in a history book.
Astronauts mostly just have to tolerate the G-forces and put up with them until the re-entry stresses are over. They sit in cushioned chairs, which helps them.
Of the first 26 astronauts, 24 were test pilots. This was a requirement until Astronaut Group 3 was selected in 1963. Buzz Aldrin and Eugene Cernan were fighter pilots instead.
They have try to last as long as they can until they return to Earth.
The answer is yes and no. John Glenn's first flight ended in a water splashdown at sea, a method NASA plans to use for the future Orion project missions. John Glenn's second flight was aboard the Space Shutle, which landed at Cape Kennedy, where it launched from. Until the Orion project begins flying, US Astronauts fly aboard a Russian Soyuz, which parachutes back to earth on dry land, not the wheels that the Shuttle used.