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Red star

A red star, five-pointed and filled (★), is an important symbol often associated with communist ideology, particularly in combination with hammer and sickle. It has been widely used in flags, state emblems, monuments, ornaments, and logos.

Red Star (novel)

Red Star is Alexander Bogdanov's 1908 science fiction novel about a communist society on Mars. Set in early Russia during the Revolution of 1905 and on socialist Mars, the novel tells the story of Leonid, a scientist-revolutionary who travels to Mars to learn and experience their socialist system and to teach them of his own world. An English translation by Charles Rougle was published in 1984.

Red Star (UK)

Red Star is a revolutionary socialist organisation in Britain formed by former members of the Communist Party of Great Britain (PCC), the Alliance for Workers' Liberty, and the Peace Party. Founded in July 2004 as the Red Party, it produced five issues of its paper, the Red Star.

Red Star (G.I. Joe)
For the Soviet symbol, see " Red star".

Red Star (, Krasnaya Zvezda) is a fictional character from the G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero line of toys, cartoons and comics. He is the leader of the Oktober Guard, the Soviet equivalent of the G.I. Joe Team, and successor to Col. Brekhov, the previous leader who died in action.

Red Star (comics)

Red Star (real name Leonid Konstantinovitch Kovar) is a fictional Russian superhero in the DC Universe.

Red star (disambiguation)

A Red star is an important ideological and religious symbol.

Red Star may also refer to:

Red Star (EP)

Red Star is a 2008 digital-only EP by Third Eye Blind released in anticipation of their fourth studio album Ursa Major. Previews of the songs on the EP were posted to the band's myspace page on November 12, 2008, and it was released officially on November 18, 2008 through all major digital music outlets. Also released with the EP was a music video for "Non-Dairy Creamer" featuring Third Eye Blind's recent Japan tour.

Usage examples of "red star".

But now everything they detected had a potential red star and a periscope attached.

Royal Air Force Tornados flew combat air-patrol missions two hundred miles offshore while the American pilots rested, a few enterprising crew chiefs painted red stars underneath the cockpits, and intelligence officers evaluated gunsight videotapes and recordings of Soviet missile radars.