Need to contact us?

Phone: (919) 962-2091
Fax: (919) 962-2279
Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Our office is located at 210 Pittsboro Street, directly across the street from the entrance to the Carolina Inn.

graduates

TOP STORY

Steve Case asks new UNC graduates to lead ‘startup nation’

Steve Case, co-founder of America Online, urged UNC-Chapel Hill’s newest graduates to be attackers, not defenders, as the new leaders of what always has been “a startup nation” during his May 12 commencement address. read more
Tamar Birckhead  

Tamar Birckhead can discuss the legal issues surrounding the suspects in the Boston Marathon bombing. find more experts

Home
AOL co-founder, investor and philanthropist Steve Case to speak at May Commencement E-mail
Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Steve Case, co-founder of America Online, chair of the Case Foundation and chairman and CEO of Revolution, will give the spring Commencement address at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Chancellor Holden Thorp will preside during the ceremony on May 12, 2013, at 9:30 a.m. in Kenan Stadium. Case also will receive an honorary ­­doctor of laws degree.

Thorp chose Case in consultation with the University’s Commencement Speaker Selection Committee, whose members include students and faculty.

Case is no stranger to UNC-Chapel Hill, which launched Innovate@Carolina:  Important Ideas for a Better World. He spoke to a campus audience and participated with Thorp in the first national forum of the National Advisory Council on Innovation and Entrepreneurship (NACIE) held at the Kenan-Flagler Business School. Case co-chairs the council.

Steve co-founded America Online (AOL) in 1985, when the Internet was in its infancy. Under Steve’s leadership, AOL became the world’s largest and most valuable Internet company, and helped drive the worldwide adoption of a medium that has transformed business and society. 

In 2005, Case went back to his entrepreneurial roots and founded Revolution, an investment firm that has backed more than two dozen companies, including LivingSocial, Zipcar, AddThis, Everyday Health and FedBid. One of Revolution’s most recent investments, Echo360, offers lecture capture technology that allows college students to access recorded classroom content from any device at any time.

He and his wife, Jean Case, created the Case Foundation in 1997. The foundation seeks to unite the principles of entrepreneurship, innovation and technology to identify, test, prove and scale ideas and models designed to create exponential impact in solving social challenges. The Case Foundation has invested in hundreds of organizations, initiatives and partnerships.  

Steve Case was born and raised in Hawaii and retains active ties to his home state, but has lived in the Washington D.C., area for more than 25 years. He was a leading voice in shaping government policy regarding the Internet, and more recently, has been actively involved in a variety of efforts to promote entrepreneurship. He is chairman of the Startup America Partnership, a nonprofit aimed at spurring job growth by supporting young businesses, and is a member of President Barack Obama’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness, where he chairs the efforts related to entrepreneurship. 

For more information about Commencement at UNC, refer to http://commencement.unc.edu

Related Case links:

http://holden.unc.edu/2011/03/steve-case-and-desh-deshpande-talk-innovation/

http://www.casefoundation.org/about/staff/steve-case

Case Photo URL: http://tinyurl.com/9tyzsxw (from 2010 UNC campus visit)

Contact:  Mike McFarland, (919) 962-8592, This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
 

CAROLINA IN THE NEWS

UNC researchers creating map to determine what we eat
The Associated Press

Do your kids love chocolate milk? It may have more calories on average than you thought. Same goes for soda.
Until now, the only way to find out what people in the United States eat and how many calories they consume has been government data, which can lag behind the rapidly expanding and changing food marketplace. Researchers from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill are trying to change that by creating a gargantuan map of what foods Americans are buying and eating.