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![]() Peter Jennings
ABC NEWS 9/20/05
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"There is no way to express how much I miss my father," his son said. "Each day is, above all else, a day without him."
CBS "60 Minutes" commentator Andy Rooney arrives at New York's Carnegie Hall, Tuesday Sept. 20 , 2005, to attend a memorial
service for ABC News anchorman Peter Jennings, who died of lung cancer on Aug. 7. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews) NEW YORK Sep 20, 2005 — At a music-filled memorial at Carnegie Hall, Peter Jennings was
remembered Tuesday as a journalist with a childlike awe of the world, a devoted father and loyal Canadian who always carried
a copy of the U.S. Constitution. A picture of a smiling Jennings, the sun in his face and blue skies behind him, was projected over the stage of the New
York landmark. The audience of about 2,000 people was filled with luminaries: Mike Wallace, Brian Williams, Dan Rather, Tom Wolfe, Larry
King, Jon Stewart, Charles Gibson, Al Sharpton, Alan Alda, George Stephanopoulos, Bob Schieffer, Michael Eisner, Elizabeth
Vargas and her husband Marc Cohn. "An anchor is what keeps a ship from drifting into dangerous waters," said ABC News President David Westin. "It keeps us
steady and secure during the night, and that's what Peter was to ABC News." When they joined the network four decades ago, Ted Koppel recalled how he was known as the smart one and Jennings the handsome
one. Jennings who died of lung cancer Aug. 7 kept his looks to the end but was also "very, very smart," he said. "From the time I first met Peter 41 years ago until our last meeting a few weeks ago, I felt a thrill whenever I saw him,"
the "Nightline" host said. "Not that many people have that charisma, that kind of animal magnetism that makes it difficult
to focus on anybody else in the room." Jennings, ABC's chief news anchor for more than 20 years, was also "famously attracted to women," Koppel said. "Even so,
he only married four of them." A handful of homeless people were also in the hall. Jennings' widow, Kayce, was startled recently when a homeless man approached
to express sympathy for her loss; Jennings had befriended him during walks in Central Park. Jennings frequently served meals to the homeless after leaving the ABC News studio and that night's broadcast of "World
News Tonight," said Mary Brosnahan Sullivan of the Coalition for the Homeless. "The Peter I knew was somebody of concrete action," she said. Personal remembrances were interspersed with music a gospel choir, violinist Natalie MacMaster, cellist Yo-Yo Ma, singer
Alison Krauss and a jazz combo featuring Wynton Marsalis. Jennings was an insatiable jazz fan. "For Peter, jazz was more than just a form of music, it was a way of looking at life," Westin said. A hopeless sentimentalist, Jennings was "the only person I knew who got weepy telling about his service on jury duty,"
ABC producer Tom Nagorski said. Alan Alda recalled Jennings as "complex and simple at the same time, knowledgeable and inquisitive, kind and tough at the
same time, gracious and direct." He never left a social engagement without Jennings giving him a book; the last was a copy
of the Constitution, he said. Jennings never lost his Canadian identity an honor guard from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police marched at the service
but was proud to also become a U.S. citizen a few years before he died. Many of his ABC News colleagues have worn bracelets saying "what would Peter do?" since his death. For all the professional
colleagues and anecdotes at the memorial, the pictures projected onstage showed an off-camera Jennings on family outings.
Friends said his two children, Chris and Elizabeth, were his proudest accomplishments. They were also the last to speak at the nearly two-hour remembrance. "There is no way to express how much I miss my father," his son said. "Each day is, above all else, a day without him."
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