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1960s Political flyer backed by a political cartoon criticizing immorality in advertising. The M/M Q refers to "Man/Mouse Quotient" and questions how far a "private person" or "ad-man" working for an advertising company on Madison Avenue will morally compromise themselves. This list is similar to Milton Glaser's "12 Steps on the Graphic Designer’s Road to Hell" list. The yes or no questions are as follows: "For the right money I would work on an ad campaign... -For cigarettes even though their use promotes cancer. -For Regimen and other unproven "medical" products which bilk the gullible public. -For polishing the public image of a foreign dictator-as in South Africa, Spain, Portugal, or the Dominican Republic; for either Republican or Democratic office-seekers, depending on the higher bidder. -For a private power snow job against public power; for the AMA against medical care for the aged and indigent. -For missile accounts whose institutional ads promote the paranoid notion that only guns can create peace and freedom." It goes on to say: "Five "YESes" means that you're headed for a promotion in the Establishment; also, that you'll get along fine regardless of who sits in the White House-Tricky Dicky, Lincoln Rockwell, or Mao Tse-tung. If your Man/Mouse Quotient is high, you may be a member of the Madison Avenue Underground a "bomb in a Brooks Brothers Suit." You might want more information about us; you might want to lend some anonymous talent to improve our next presentation."