Program with host Tom Gould who presents reports and commentaries on the week's news. 1. INFLATION. A look at Canada's economic problems during the summer of 1981. Includes a report on the rising cost of living index, focusing on the price of food and housing. 2. PREMIER'S 22nd ANNUAL CONFERENCE. Shots of the following Premiers attending the two-day conference: Bill Davis, Ont.; Sterling Lyon, Man.; Peter Lougheed, Alta.; Brian Peckford, Nfld.; with comments by Alan Blakeney, Sask., Richard Hatfield, N.B., and Sterling Lyon on the oil pricing policy. 3.CANADA'S AIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLERS WALKOUT. Air traffic controllers walk out in sympathy with their U.S. colleagues. Numerous shots of crowds of frustrated passengers waiting at major airports; Canadian Controllers' president, Bill Robertson, going into session to be held with Canadian Transport Minister, Jean Luc Pépin; the executive meeting of the International Air Traffic Controllers Federation in Amsterdam; and strikers forming picket lines. Comments by Tom Grifferty of the Controllers' Association, Robert Poli, American PATCO president, Carol Haly, passenger delayed in New York, Jean Luc Pépin, stating why walkout is unacceptable; and U.S. President, Ronald Reagan, refusing to pardon the walkout by American air traffic controllers.~ 4. USA/USSR RELATIONS. Speaking from his California ranch, Pres. Reagan suggests holding a summit conference with Brezhnev. Segment of Secretary of State, Alexander Haig's address on the U.S. foreign policy package follows. Excerpt of an ABC report on the neutron bomb with animated illustrations by artist, Bill Lemmer, of its effects in a battlefield scenario. Report includes comments by Reagan; Moscow's reaction to Reagan's decision to go ahead with the neutron bomb; footage of the Warsaw Pact manoeuvers and of Russian manoeuvers. 5. CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL WARFARE. Comprehensive report includes sequence on the transportation of nerve gas from Denver to Utah in 1979, photos of leaking nerve gas canisters, a dramatization of battlefield operations where chemical warfare is used, archival footage of the last and only large scale use of chemical weapons in World War One, and the explosion of a chemical research building in Sverdlovsk, Russia. Also included are shots of the reinforced bunkers in Tooele, Utah, where the nerve gas is to be stored, of the U.S. Army Rocky Mountain and Pine Bluff Arsenals, and of Nixon's 1969 announcement of the government's intention of destroying the stockpile of biological weapons. Following are comments by Gov. Scott Matheson, Utah; Col. Billy Cook, Army Chemical Corps; Sen. Sam Nunn, Armed Services Committee; Sen. Mark Hatfield, Oregon; and Robert Kupperman, Georgetown University Centre for Stragetic Studies.~ 6. IRAN: FRENCH GO HOME. Report on the current situation in the Islamic Republic of Iran. Footage includes shots of French nationals and embassy staff members at Tehran airport, ready to leave; street scenes of Iranian society; the ancient mosque at Qum; the Shahyad movement, a left-over symbol of the late Shah; a session of Iran's legislative body in Tehran; the Jewish community of Iran; military casualties in Abadan; opium addicts; and the aftermath of terrorist bomb attacks. Comments by Tom Aspell, news producer and by Hashemi Rafsanjani, Speaker of Iranian Parliament . 7. POLAND. Report by Jeremy King on Poland's Solidarity labour movement as it celebrates its first anniversary. Footage includes chairman Lech Walesa at a Solidarity meeting and in Gdansk on Sept. 5, 1980, being carried on the shoulders of supporters. Views of the newly-elected Party Central Committee; of the Soviet fleet in the Baltic Sea and of anoutdoor mass which closed the anniversary celebrations. 8. THE BERLIN WALL. A look at the Berlin Wall on the 20th anniversary of its construction. Archival footage includes soldiers standing guard as construction work began; the exodus of people from East Berlin; an aerial view of the boundary between East and West Berlin before the construction of the wall; people escaping through barb wire into West Berlin. John F. Kennedy is shown giving a "pep talk" in Berlin on June 26, l963. Additional shots include the border check points and memorials on the west side of the wall dedicated to those who failed in the escape attempts. Comments by Fredrick Luft, professor, and Gerhard Jagger, author. <60mn>