Jul 2009 to Sep 2012 Shift ManagerHertz Rent a Car
Feb 2005 to Apr 2009 Utility RepresentativeLife touch Photography Citrus Heights, CA Aug 2003 to Feb 2005 Equipment Manager and Photographer
Education:
American River College Sacramento, CA 2009 to 2014 AS Degree in Automotive MechanicsCalifornia State University Northridge 1999 to 2003 Photography / Two dimensional ArtGranada Hills High School 1999
Feb 2008 to May 2010 Program DirectorAdult and Family Services
Jul 2006 to Jan 2008 Program ManagerRiver Oak Center For Children
Mar 2006 to Jul 2006 Family FacilitatorRiver Oak Center For Children Sacramento, CA Apr 2001 to Jul 2006River Oak Center For Children
Aug 2005 to Mar 2006 Child Care ManagerRiver Oak Center For Children
May 2004 to Jul 2005 Skills TrainerRiver Oak Center For Children
Apr 2002 to Apr 2004 Family Specialist SupervisorRiver Oak Center For Children
Apr 2001 to Mar 2002 Family Specialist
Education:
Presidio Graduate School San Francisco, CA Jan 2010 to Jan 2014 Master's in Public AdministrationMontana State University Bozeman, MT 1996 to Dec 2000 Bachelor Of Science in Health and Human Development
Medicine Doctors
Dr. Nicholas B Lee, Sacramento CA - MD (Doctor of Medicine)
Dr. Lee works in Austin, TX and specializes in Anesthesiology. Dr. Lee is affiliated with Dell Childrens Medical Center, Seton Medical Center Austin, Seton Shoal Creek Hospital and University Medical Center Brackenridge.
Nicholas Lee, 11, of Caryn Elementary School in Alta Loma clinched victory by spelling the uncommon word, sinecure, defined as a job or position in which someone is paid to do little or no work.
Date: Mar 07, 2015
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
Capturing the world through photography, video and multimedia
Los Angeles: The coffin of Los Angeles police Officer Nicholas Lee, killed last week in a traffic accident, is carried into the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, where he was eulogized as a devoted family man and the quintessential LAPD officer. More photos
Date: Mar 14, 2014
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
Meteoroid impacts may explain some satellite mysteries
the nation's power grid. In the study, and in experiments presented this summer by Close's student, Nicholas Lee, at an American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics meeting in Honolulu, the engineers looked at whether meteoroids would generate small electromagnetic pulses on satellites they hit.