http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000103&sid=aX46hE_WaSRY&refer=usAug. 8 (Bloomberg) -- Peter Jennings, anchorman of ABC's ``World News Tonight'' for 22 years, died yesterday at 67, according to a story on ABC News Web site. He told viewers on April 5 that he had been diagnosed with lung cancer.
He died at his home in New York City, ABC News said. Messages posted today on the ABC News Web site offered words of support and calls for prayers for Jennings.
In an April 29 posting on the site after he had begun chemotherapy, Jennings wrote, ``Yesterday, I decided to go to the office; I live only a few blocks away. I got as far as the bedroom door. Chemo Strikes.''
Jennings, a high-school dropout, began his broadcasting career on Canadian television show when he was 9 years old and worked his way up the ranks of television journalism. He became the youngest TV anchor when he hosted ``World News Tonight'' for the first time from 1965. He covered, first as a reporter and then as anchorman, world events ranging from the Kennedy assassination to the demolition of the Berlin Wall to the Sept. 11 attacks.
Following the announcement of his illness, Jennings continued to participate in news meetings, ABC News said on its Web site. He posted several notes on the Web to fans, and a message of support July 8 to Londoners after terrorists bombed the transit system in that city. He had lived and reported in the British capital for 15 years.
His last message was on July 29, thanking supporters for their birthday wishes. He turned 67 that day.