EX-COMIC MARTY INGELS
ACKNOWLEDGED AS "SUPER AGENT"

arty Ingels, onetime television comic knows literally hundreds of celebrities on a first name basis. And he has parlayed that attribute into a $6,000,000 a year business as a middleman, who serves as a "decomplicator" between the stars and advertisers who would use their talents to push a product.
    Ingels is married to lovely and talented Shirley Jones, whose substantial movie credits include roles in "Oklahoma", "Carousel", "Music Man" as well as her Oscar-winning per- formance in "Elmer Gantry." Television viewers saw her in the "Partridge Family," and recently, her own show, "Shirley."
    The staccato-talking Ingels decided one day not too many years ago to write a letter to 10 large advertising agencies saying in effect: "Are you having difficulty getting through to actors for product endorsements? If they're tough to reach, let me help you."
    The     letters      generated    a   100% response   of  "please do,"    and   Marty   

Ilie Nastase. And he brought them in for "moderate" fees to dramatize his point that advertisers don't have to throw away their money, even on movie stars.
    Ingels actually got into the celebrity brokerage business when his television series "I'm Dickens, He's Fenster" was cancelled. Ingels was Fenster. Following that show's demise, the fast talking Ingels decided to get into a new field, and by 1971 his "brokerage" career was born.
    Ingels' tenacity in business is reflected in his approach. "I can get through to anybody, any place, anywhere. And I'm just relentless," he vows.
    Posted next to the front door of Shirley Jones and Marty Ingels' Cape Cod style home in Beverly Hills is a tongue in cheek sign saying "No Fans Please." And also prominent in the driveway is a gleaming Excalibur which is a gift to Shirley from her favorite fan Marty Ingels, the famous celebrity broker.

Ingels' celebrity brokerage was in business.
    The list of names that Ingels has lined up for commercials is a show business "Who's Who." Such as Robert Mit- chum, for a public service Jobs Corps spot; Howard Cosell, Jack Palance, "Mean Joe" Greene; Sandy Dennis, Joey Heatherton, David Frye, Truman Capote, Neil Simon, Leslie Caron, Jean-Pierre Aumont,  Louis Nye,  Vincent Price  and

Excalibur Dealers:
Dan Brush of Excalibur-West, Inc.

    In 1967 Dan Brush was a 19-year- old accounting trainee assisting the treasurer of SS Automobile, a two-year- old, relatively unknown Milwaukee manufacturer with less than a dozen employes.
    Today, as president of Excalibur West in Reno, Nevada, he sells the world's most luxurious automobile, in one of the country's most exciting resort cities, to some of the most interesting people and still has a little time for his favorite form of recreation golf.
    In 1978 when the Reno position became available, Dan decided to ask for it. He figured that he had been "behind the desk" long enough, and he wanted a chance at sales as well as administrative duties. In June of that year he was on his way to Reno. Dan and his wife Tande have loved living in Reno and sharing the beautiful surroundings with their children Jason 7, Kelsey 4, and Daryn 1.
    Though Dan has been selling Ex- caliburs for some time, he still is "amazed" at times at   how   some   sales

come about. He recalls the couple from Oregon who had seen Dan's Excalibur parked in a conspicuous spot in the MGM Grand Hotel parking lot. (He parks there several times a week while having lunch, a subtle "advertisement" for the luxury automobile.)
    The couple pulled up to his dealership in a pickup truck and ex- pressed an interest in the Excalibur. Within a short time, after paying cash for the car, the couple resumed their trip, one driving the pickup, the other the Excalibur.
    Then there was the woman who inadvertently ran across Dan's Excalibur West advertisement in the Yellow Pages, while looking for a beauty salon. Curious, she asked her husband to take her to Excalibur West. When she arrived, she fell in love with the car and bought it on the spot.
    Or the traveler, whose plane couldn't land at Lake Tahoe because of bad weather, who decided to land in Reno. While there, he visited Excalibur West. Result. Another sale.

    Excalibur West's 3200 square foot location is on the north end of the Reno airport runway, and is strategically located between the airport and the famed MGM Grand Hotel, which is "the place" in Reno.
From its documented success, it's quite obvious that people are aware of Excalibur West, and Dan Brush.