The Driver of the train usually sits at the front of the train
It depends on the kind of train.
Yes, it has a working headlight on the front of the train.
The porter is at the front of the train.
In most cases the car at the front of a train is the engine or the locomotive. However, sometimes the train is pushed from behind and then the engine is the car at the end.
Paul jumps in front of the train in Willa Cather's short story "Paul's Case."
cow pusher
The engine is unhooked at the back and a new one put on to what would be the front of the train.
Panoramic Railway View from Front of Train - 1910 was released on: USA: May 1910
If the train is at the front, it pulls. If it is at the back, it pushes. Typically trains pull there cargo
you do nothing
The front of a regular train is usually pulled by a locomotive. This is the powerhouse of the train. If your train doesn't have a locomotive, but looks like cars with a window for the train crew, then that can be called the cab car, or as you put it, "the head of a train". There isn't any slang (that I know of) used to call it something special. I uses "front of train", but "head" sounds better. We do shorten "locomotive" to just "loco".
you shoot them so none of them reach the front of the train