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"Green"
Internet Provider Wins
University of Maryland Business
Competition
Under Armour's Kevin Plank
and BB&T Sponsor Third Annual Event
College Park, Md. - April 15,
2008 - Environmentally friendly
Internet provider
Anaptyx
won the top prize in this years
Cupids Cup business competition on
April 11, hosted by the Dingman
Center for Entrepreneurship at the
University of Maryland's Robert H.
Smith School of Business. School
alumnus Kevin Plank, chief executive
and founder of sports apparel maker
Under Armour, donated the $22,500 in
prize money to the winning student-
and alumni-run startup companies.

This year, the contest was
preceded by the BB&T Business
Invitational, a showcase of
Dingman-affiliated companies, which
attracted local entrepreneurs,
investors, students and university
community members.
Its important to recognize the
hard work and entrepreneurial spirit
of the young men and women who will
become the future business leaders
of tomorrow, said Plank, CEO and
founder of Under Armour. All of this
years participants showed the
intuition and perseverance to be
great leaders and I look forward to
watching them on their road to
success.
Plank,
a 1996 graduate, presented the
$15,000 first prize and trophy cup
to Anaptyx founder Jonathan Rust, a
part-time Smith MBA student, and a
$7,500 check to runner-up Web site
company Maverick Development Inc.
For the final round of the
competition, five teams each had
eight minutes to present their
business plans before judges and a
sizable crowd at the Smith School.
Other finalists were A Slice of
Paradise, a handbag and accessories
retailer; BlueTree Marketing Corp.,
a Web auctioneer for nonprofit
fundraisers; and College Magazine,
publisher of a magazine and Web
products aimed at undergraduate
students. A Slice of Paradise won
the $5,000 peoples choice prize
after an audience text-message vote.
Congratulations to this years
winners and participants, said Asher
Epstein, managing director of the
Dingman Center for Entrepreneurship.
This competition highlights the
enormous growth potential of these
companies and is another example of
the centers efforts to provide hands
on entrepreneurial experience to our
students.
The competition, now in its third
year, got its name from one of
Planks early entrepreneurial
ventures, a Valentines Day rose sale
business called Cupids Valentine the
started while and undergraduate at
the University of Maryland. This
small business earned him more than
$20,000 during his four years at the
university and helped fund his
ultimate entrepreneurial venture,
Baltimore-based Under Armour.
Plank
has been a longtime supporter of the
Smith School and the Dingman Center,
donating $75,000 last fall, which
helped create an endowment fund that
the center uses to invest in viable
startup businesses.
In addition to funding, the Smith
Schools Dingman Center provides both
MBA and undergraduate students with
access to mentoring and weekly
opportunities to pitch their
business ideas for feedback from
experienced
entrepreneurs-in-residence. The
schools programs are rated among the
top in the nation for
entrepreneurship, according to
rankings by U.S. News & World
Report, Entrepreneur magazine and
The Princeton Review, and Fortune
Small Business.
About the University of Maryland's
Robert H. Smith School of Business
The Robert H. Smith School of
Business is an internationally
recognized leader in management
education and research. One of 14
colleges and schools at the
University of Maryland, College
Park, the Smith School offers
undergraduate, full-time and
part-time MBA, executive MBA,
executive MS, PhD and executive
education programs, as well as
outreach services to the corporate
community. The school offers its
degree, custom and certification
programs in learning locations on
three continents - North America,
Europe and Asia.
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