CBC television program featuring the following news highlights of the week:~Report on preparations by Iceland to extend its fishing limit to 12 miles, starting on 1 September 1958. Iceland claims that other nations, particularly Britain, are over-fishing its waters. There are visuals of: a ship; a man on a ship swabbing a deck; and a man at the wheel of a ship. Ships patrol the waters.~Report on a Seafarer's International Union (SIU) longshoremen's strike in Halifax, Nova Scotia. There are visuals of Cuban sailors working at docks, loading food and equipment without interference from picketers.~The longshoremen's strike for idle docks in Vancouver, British Columbia. There are visuals of anchored ships, warehouse stocks, lumber on docks, idle machines, and an empty harbour.~Toronto Mayor Nathan Philips throws a shovelful of the first load of Nova Scotia coal to reach Toronto by ship since the Second World War. There is a shot of a ship at the dock in Toronto.~The first bullfight ever held in Canada takes place in Lindsay, Ontario. There are shots of the fight, including the matador with the bull. In one scene, the bull hits the matador.~The world championship of bicycle ball (also called cycle hockey) is held in Switzerland. East Germany beats West Germany. There are visuals of the East German team and players on bicycles, hitting the ball with the front wheel of the bike. The game is popular in East Germany.~[Stuart] Johnson, Miss Alaska, is shown in New York City, bound for the Miss America beauty pageant in Atlantic City. She poses in a fur parka in front of a totem pole.~Two federal government biologists catch fish in Jasper National Park to stock waterways. They catch the fish with an electrical rod and bring them to the government's fish hatchery in Jasper National Park, the government's largest fish hatchery. There are visuals of specimans in the laboratory, the biologists releasing a large quantity of fish back into the river, scenery in the Rockies, and a man with two boys fishing in a river or stream with their catch on a rope.~The report entitled Gas Pipeline Nears Quebec is about the Trans-Canada gas pipeline, which has nearly completed its construction through northern Ontario. There are visuals of workers, men laying pipe with the help of huge cranes, machines, pipes, welders joining sections of the pipeline, a machine coating the pipeline with fibreglass and wrapping it, and using explosives to blast solid rock. Bulldozers push earth over the pipes, burying them underground.~The final report is entitled Expo 58 : Crossroads of the Whole World. It visits the 1958 Brussels World Fair, featuring exhibits by fifteen nations and nine international groups. Crowds visit the buildings, monuments, and statues at the fair. There are displays about science and industry, as well as a miniature relief map of Brussels, with miniature cars driving down highways and artificial waves hitting the shores. Visitors are transported by chair lift, motorcyle taxis, and trains. The Canada Building displays Canadian art, the Orenda jet engine, the films HEN HOP and ROAD OF IRON, and exhibits about the Inuit and Mounties. The Soviet Union's building displays the first Sputnik satellite and statues. The interior of the American pavilion is also shown. Duncan Elliot reports.