Sentences with phrase «worked by moonlight»

Not exact matches

The moonlighting officers are to be paid about $ 16 an hour for their work at Monday night's Bears - Packers game and at similar big events overseen by the Chicago Park District and the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority.
The moonlighting officers are to be paid about $ 16 an hour for their work at Monday night's Bears - Packers game and at similar events overseen by the Chicago Park District and the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority.
By 1997, although still at the Daily Express, I was well into moonlighting for TV companies and spent the morning after election night in Downing Street — working for a broadcaster - covering the grand entrance of Tony and Cherie Blair, cheered on by all those adoring Labour activistBy 1997, although still at the Daily Express, I was well into moonlighting for TV companies and spent the morning after election night in Downing Street — working for a broadcaster - covering the grand entrance of Tony and Cherie Blair, cheered on by all those adoring Labour activistby all those adoring Labour activists.
The two lighting modes work by the flick of a switch to transfer from daylight to moonlight.
We meet Emily (Malin Akerman), an old flame of Ben that has other plans for him; An accountant (Byung - hun Lee) who works at the law firm by day, but moonlights as a hit man, with religious intentions and stage - four Tuberculosis to boot; and Doug (Glen Powell) Ben's best friend and colleague, who is a lawyer by day but a computer hacker at night.
Here she plays Anne, a top writer for Elle in Paris, working on a feature article about female students supplementing their income by moonlighting as prostitutes.
Everyone knows about Mission for fiery Chinese food but few are aware it moonlights in pizza made with a San Francisco sourdough starter and Italian DOP tomatoes by a Filipina chef working for Korean - born orphan raised in Oklahoma.
Much of his work celebrates Southern English coastlines including the sea and skies of Hastings and Rye often illuminated by dawn, dusk or glowing moonlight.
He also published a poem of his own inspired by Howard's work, and tried to hire Caspar David Friedrich, the German lyrical painter of loneliness and moonlight, to paint some studies of clouds, «for scientific use,» in accord with Howard's classification.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z