Headhunter

Headhunter or head hunter may refer to:

General use

  • Headhunting, the practice of literally taking a person's head after killing them
  • Headhunter, an informal name for an employment recruiter, sometimes referred to as executive search
  • Military

  • Headhunters, nickname of the 80th Fighter Squadron at Kunsan Air Base, Korea
  • Headhunters, nickname of the 1st Squadron, 9th Cavalry Regiment out of Ft Hood, part of 1st Cavalry Division
  • Sports

  • Headhunter (baseball), a baseball pitcher who aims at a player's head
  • Helmet-to-helmet collision, a defender in American football, typically a safety or cornerback, who has a reputation to deliver powerful hits to the helmet; often results in a 15-yard penalty
  • The Headhunters (professional wrestling) (born 1968), professional wrestling tag team
  • Chelsea Headhunters, hooligans associated with Chelsea football club in London
  • Mississippi Headhunters, a professional indoor football member of the af2
  • Jade Jones (taekwondo), British taekwondo fighter nicknamed "The Headhunter"
  • Beanball

    "Beanball" is a colloquialism used in baseball, for a ball thrown at an opposing player with the intention of striking him such as to cause harm, often connoting a throw at the player's head (or "bean" in old-fashioned slang).

    A pitcher who throws beanballs often is known as a "headhunter". The term may be applied to any sport in which a player on one team regularly attempts to throw a ball toward the general vicinity of a player of the opposite team, but is typically expected not to hit that player with the ball.

    In cricket, the equivalent term is "beamer" or "bodyline".

    Baseball

    In baseball, a beanball is a pitch, similar to a brushback pitch but actually intended to hit the batter as it is thrown at the head. It is rarely used as a strategic weapon, and is usually an act of anger and frustration; however, batters facing known headhunters are given a reason to fear a beanball and may alter their approach to hitting in the interests of self-protection, perhaps giving some strategic advantage to the pitcher. Some pitchers have been known to throw beanballs in response to giving up home runs. Teams with heated rivalries often find several beanballs exchanged in a season.

    Michael Slade

    Michael Slade (born 1947, Lethbridge, Alberta) is the pen name of Canadian novelist Jay Clarke, a lawyer who has participated in more than 100 criminal cases and who specializes in criminal insanity. Before Clarke entered law school, his undergraduate studies focused on history. Clarke’s writing stems from his experience as a practicing lawyer and historian, as well as his extensive world travel. He works closely with police officers to ensure that his novels incorporate state-of-the-art police techniques. Writing as a team with a handful of other authors, Clarke has published a series of police procedurals about the fictional Special External Section (Special X) of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. His novels describe Special X protagonists as they track down fugitives, typically deranged murderers. Four other authors have contributed under the name Michael Slade: John Banks, Lee Clarke, Rebecca Clarke, and Richard Covell. Despite the collaborative nature of the books, Jay Clarke is the predominant voice in their writing. Currently, Jay and his daughter Rebecca write under the Slade name.

    Kapo

    Kapo can refer to one of the following:

  • Kapo (mythology), a Hawaiian goddess or god
  • Olivier Kapo, a French football player
  • Mallica Reynolds, a Jamaican artist that went by the name Kapo
  • A German colloquial job title, designating a foreman, especially on construction sites
  • Kapo (concentration camp), a privileged prisoner who served as a barracks supervisor/warder or led work details in a Nazi concentration camp
  • Kapò, a 1960 film about a concentration camp inmate, directed by Gillo Pontecorvo
  • Kapo (2000 film), an Israeli documentary about the Jewish kapos who collaborated with the Nazis during World War II
  • Kapo!, a studio album by the neo-folk band Death In June
  • Kazan Aircraft Production Association, a Russian aircraft manufacturer
  • KAPO or KaPo, an acronym for Kaitsepolitsei, the state security agency of Estonia
  • KAPO, abbreviated from Kantonspolizei, Swiss cantonal police
  • Death in June discography

    Death in June have an extensive discography, including compilations of older material mixed with (then) newer, singles, limited editions and multiple versions of a single releases.

    Albums

  • The Guilty Have No Pride (1983)
  • Burial (1984)
  • Nada! (1985)
  • The World That Summer (1986)
  • Brown Book (1987)
  • The Wall of Sacrifice (1989)
  • Östenbräun (1989)
  • But, What Ends When the Symbols Shatter? (1992)
  • Rose Clouds of Holocaust (1995)
  • Death in June Presents: Occidental Martyr (1995)
  • Death in June Presents: KAPO! (1996)
  • Scorpion Wind : Heaven Sent (1996) - Death In June & Boyd Rice
  • Take Care & Control (1998)
  • Operation Hummingbird (2000)
  • All Pigs Must Die (2001)
  • Alarm Agents (2004) - Death In June & Boyd Rice
  • Free Tibet (2006) - MP3 release only via official website
  • The Rule of Thirds (2008)
  • Peaceful Snow/Lounge Corps (2010)
  • The Snow Bunker Tapes (2013)
  • Singles

  • Heaven Street (1981)
  • State Laughter (1982)
  • She Said Destroy (1984)
  • Born Again (1985)
  • Come Before Christ and Murder Love (1985)
  • To Drown a Rose (1987)
  • Paradise Rising (1992)
  • Kapò

    Kapò (Italian pronunciation: [kaˈpɔ]) is a 1960 Italian film about the Holocaust directed by Gillo Pontecorvo. It was nominated for the Academy Award as Best Foreign Language Film. It was an Italian-French co-production filmed in Yugoslavia.

    Plot

    Naive fourteen-year-old Edith (Susan Strasberg) and her Jewish parents are sent to a concentration camp, where the latter are killed. Sofia (Didi Perego), an older, political prisoner, and a kindly camp doctor save her from a similar fate by giving her a new, non-Jewish identity, that of the newly dead Nichole Niepas.

    As time goes by, she becomes more hardened to the brutal life. She first sells her body to a German guard in return for food. She becomes fond of another guard, Karl (Gianni Garko). The fraternization helps her become a kapo, one of those put in charge of the other prisoners. She thrives while the idealistic Sofia grows steadily weaker.

    When she falls in love with Sascha (Laurent Terzieff), a Russian prisoner of war, Edith is persuaded to play a crucial role in a mass escape, turning off the power. Most of the would-be escapees are killed, but some get away. Edith is not one of them. As she lies dying, she tells Karl, "They screwed us over, Karl, they screwed us both over." She dies saying the traditional prayer Shema Yisrael, to feel again her real identity.

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