| If the police or authorities notice them moonlighting, then the employee faces a 5,000 zloty fine. |
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| To support himself during the first few months, he found work moonlighting as a telemarketer and cutting down trees on weekends. |
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| He was moonlighting as a bartender on Friday and Saturday nights to make some extra money. |
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| The list of actors moonlighting as frustrated musicians is not a short one. |
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| Why it's moonlighting of course or the holding of a second job in addition to your regular one. |
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| This kind of moonlighting is in breach of the code of conduct of the civil service, according to a report by the government service commission. |
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| Can he explain how giving more people access to employment insurance would encourage moonlighting? |
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| It was 1961, and Gregory was a 29-year-old post office worker moonlighting at a black club in Chicago called Roberts Show Bar. |
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| Low rates apply on social grounds, employment grounds, and in order to regulate and prevent moonlighting. |
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| The theater manager called security, and three moonlighting off-duty police deputies arrived. |
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| In 2007, not to miss a part of the trade, Johnnes began moonlighting as a winemaker in both Oregon and Burgundy. |
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| When Joan Leonard puts the set on, Bruce Willis and Cybill Shepherd are yelling at each other on moonlighting. |
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| In this regard, it should be pointed out that in recent years the Government of Italy has launched a resolute policy to combat moonlighting. |
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| Mr McGuinness and others from Ulster, both republican and unionist, have in fact been moonlighting as peacemakers for some time. |
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| The World Bank acknowledges that low wages explain corruption, low productivity and moonlighting in many African public services. |
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| Targeted reduction in VAT rates for labour intensive services, so as to boost demand for such services and reduce moonlighting. |
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| Here the scope would have been extensive but, aside from sanctioning moonlighting, the government continues to forbid private enterprise. |
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| Around Brazil, many killings are committed by policemen, either moonlighting as vigilantes or while on duty. |
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| It set a floor on mortgage rates and ordered cash-rich state-owned enterprises to stop moonlighting as property developers. |
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| We are not asking the government to encourage moonlighting, but to give more people the right to employment insurance. |
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| A SUN-STARVED Scottish strawberry farmer is moonlighting as a guinea pig for supermarket bosses. |
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| People are drawn to moonlighting for a number of financial and non-financial reasons, ranging from the need or desire to supplement regular income, to the enjoyment derived from a second job. |
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| Uber contracts with the driver, they give the driver their smartphone, the driver starts moonlighting in-between regular limo runs for their company, that driver has an accident. |
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| They have little choice but to supplement their income by moonlighting or, more likely, with bribes. The opportunities for extracting them are endless. |
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| Civil servants have been reduced to moonlighting in menial jobs to make up for their shrinking buying power. In this section When will it ever end? |
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| The second is that it intensifies the fight against moonlighting, in particular by introducing financial and criminal penalties for employers of illegal immigrants. |
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| Why would governments and parliaments not be allowed to weigh up for themselves the goals to collect as many taxes as possible or to promote employment and make moonlighting legal? |
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| Meanwhile, we have proof that transitional periods lead to considerably more moonlighting and feigned self-employment, which puts wages under pressure and causes employees to be faced with bad and unfair working conditions. |
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| Once they sense this unfairness, many people will engage in illicit behaviour, such as working under the table or moonlighting, in order to make ends meet at the end of the month. |
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| A recognised, insurable employment also brings in contributions to social security systems and opens the way for many women to leave moonlighting for legal work with social provision for old age and sickness. |
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| Service vouchers are a system implemented by the Federal Government in 2004 with the objective of creating 25,000 jobs by 2007 and combating moonlighting. |
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| However, since then the number of women working at two or more jobs increased at a much faster pace than the number of men, and by 1995 as many women as men were moonlighting. |
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| They are entering the market, setting up stalls on snowy streets, moonlighting to supplement exiguous incomes. |
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| The farm drivers were often found to be filching from the cars for spare parts or moonlighting with trucks for personal gain. |
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| There were also weak attempts at bel canto, suggesting Groban may want to consider moonlighting at Miceli's if it all falls through tomorrow. |
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| The incidence of moonlighting shows important patterns across demographic groups. |
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| Different lighting includes uplighting, downlighting, moonlighting, mirror lighting, spotlighting and backlighting. |
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| Another moonlighting protein, delta 2 crystallin in the duck eye lens is the same protein as the ubiquitous urea cycle enzyme arginosuccinate lyase. |
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| The two men include a Bahraini hotel human resources manager accused of moonlighting as a pimp and a Bangladeshi bellboy who allegedly supplied customers. |
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| She began writing Cybill Disobedience 10 years ago after the cancellation of Moonlighting, the detective caper co-starring Bruce Willis. |
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| Moonlighting has dark undertones, suggesting forays into unknown territory. |
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| Moonlighting star Bruce Willis made the leap from TV to Tinseltown with this potty-mouthed action bonanza. |
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