that makes accommodation to our older education establishment quite difficult. One strategy of cultural response would be to raise the visual level of the TV image to enable the young student to gain access to the old visual world of the classroom and the curriculum. This would be worth trying as a temporary expedient. But TV is only one component of the electric environment of instant circuitry that has succeeded the old world of the wheel and nuts and bolts. We would be foolish not to ease our transition from the fragmented visual world of the existing educational establishment by every possible means. The existential philosophy, as well as the Theatre of the Absurd, represents anti-environments that point to the critical pressures of the new electric environment. Jean Paul Sartre, as much as Samuel Beckett and Arthur Miller, has declared the