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IN THE NEWS
For your information
Peter Jennings has lung cancer
NEW
YORK (CNN) -- Longtime ABC anchor Peter Jennings has been
diagnosed with lung cancer, the broadcaster announced on his
evening newscast Tuesday.
Tuesday, April 5,
2005 |

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Says he stopped smoking 20 years ago, but relapsed during 9/11
"Yes, I was a
smoker until about 20 years ago, and I was weak and I smoked over
9/11," the 66-year-old anchor told viewers at the close of Tuesday's
"World News Tonight," his usually mellifluous voice hoarse.
He lauded his
colleagues, to whom he had divulged his diagnosis earlier in the day
in an e-mail, as "incredibly supportive."
Nearly 10 million
Americans "are living with cancer," he said, citing National Cancer
Institute statistics. "I have a lot to learn from them, and 'living'
is the key word."
Jennings, a native
Canadian who became a U.S. citizen in 2003, said he would continue
to anchor the program.
"On good days, my
voice will not always be like this," he said with a chuckle.
Jennings, known for
always being immaculately dressed and coiffed, is to begin
chemotherapy Monday. "I wonder if other men and women ask their
doctors right away, 'OK, doc, when does the hair go?'" he said.
Hair loss is a
common side effect of some forms of chemotherapy.
In his e-mail to
ABC News staff, Jennings said the diagnosis "was quite a surprise."
"There will be good
days and bad, which means that some days I may be cranky and some
days really cranky!"
"Hundreds of you
have been like family. It feels good to have such a family right
now."
An ABC spokesman
said Jennings received the diagnosis Monday night.
The spokesman said
Jennings had been feeling ill for the past couple of months and
underwent a number of tests before the diagnosis was made. He did
not travel to cover the tsunami in South Asia or the death of Pope
John Paul II.
In a companion
e-mail, ABC News President David Westin said, "I know that all of us
will give him every bit of support that he needs and asks for. Peter
will once again lead the way, but we will stand with him at every
turn."
Westin said when
Jennings does not feel well enough to anchor, "Charlie Gibson,
Elizabeth Vargas and others will be substituting for Peter as
necessary and when their other responsibilities permit."
Vargas anchored
Tuesday night's program.
The news sent
ripples through the broadcast journalism world, which has been
shaken up in recent months, with CBS's Dan Rather and NBC's Tom
Brokaw leaving their anchor posts.
Last week, Ted
Koppel announced he would soon be leaving the job as anchor of ABC's
"Nightline." In addition, former ABC "20/20" anchor Barbara Walters
also recently stepped down.
"Peter is an old
friend," Brokaw said in a press release. "I'm heartbroken, but he's
also a tough guy. I'm counting on him getting through this very
difficult passage."
Jennings has been
the sole anchor of "World News Tonight" since 1983. He was part of a
group of anchors, with Frank Reynolds and Max Robinson, for several
years before that.
He has won numerous
awards, among them a National Headliner Award and the George Foster
Peabody award.
Before taking the
anchor chair at "World News Tonight," Jennings was an ABC
correspondent.
Among the stories
he covered were the Summer Olympic Games in Munich, Germany, in
1972, when members of the Arab terrorist group Black September
seized the Israeli compound and took athletes hostage.
In 1965, when he
was 26, Jennings was chosen to anchor "The ABC Evening News." Two
years later, he told his bosses he needed more seasoning and
returned to field reporting, said CNN correspondent Jeff Greenfield,
a former ABC News employee.
Lung cancer is the
No. 1 cancer killer of men and women in the world. It is difficult
to detect early and difficult to treat.
The average patient
is diagnosed at age 70.
The five-year
survival rate for men diagnosed with the disease is 14 percent,
according to the National Cancer Institute.
This year, there
will be 172,570 new cases of lung cancer in the United States:
93,010 among men and 79,560 among women, according to the American
Cancer Society.
Oncologists say the
stage of Jennings' cancer, which ABC did not divulge, is critical to
his prognosis. Cancer stages range from 1 to 4, with 4 being the
most advanced, indicating the disease has spread.
Typically, patients
with Stage 1 lung cancer, the most curable form, are initially
treated with surgery, said Dr. Jimmy Wang, an oncologist at
Georgetown University in Washington, who has not reviewed Jennings'
case.
The fact that
Jennings is starting his treatment with chemotherapy "is actually a
little bit worrisome," Wang said.
Asked whether that
suggests Jennings' cancer is advanced, Wang said, "That would
suggest that, yes."
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BIO:
Peter Jennings (1938-2005)
born in Toronto, Ontario
father, Charles, was a leading journalist, announcer, and later
executive with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC)
at age nine, hosted a half-hour weekly children's show on CBC
became an interviewer for an Ontario radio station after dropping
out of preparatory school, then joined the CBC as host of a
public-affairs program.
in 1962 he became co-anchor of Canada's first national
commercial-network newscast (CTV)
moved to New York in 1964 and became a correspondent for American
Broadcasting Companies (ABC), then became anchor of ABC's nightly
newscast (1965-67)
praised for his on-the-spot coverage and his documentary "Southern
Accents: Northern Ghettos," however he returned to reporting in
1968, the move was attributed to his youth, inexperience, and
Canadian background
in the early 1970's he was appointed head of the ABC News Middle
East bureau in Beirut.
in 1971 Jennings received the National Headliner Award for his
reporting on the civil war in Bangladesh
his profile of Egyptian president aAnwar al-Sadat earned him a
Peabody Award in 1974
served briefly as Washington correspondent for ABC's "A.M.
America" (1974-75), then went to London as the network's chief
foreign correspondent
in London he co-anchored the nightly newscast "World News
Tonight," and he was appointed sole anchor when the show moved to
New York City in 1983
became known for his straightforward newscasting
his November 1990 interview with Saddam Hussein just before the
Persian Gulf War was one of few granted to western reporters
biography: Anchors: Brokaw, Jennings, Rather, and the evening news
by Robert Goldberg and Gerald Jay Goldberg
Click here to read more about him
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