Great news for Tom Brokaw, as the award-winning former NBC News anchor has announced that his cancer has gone into remission. It was in February when Brokaw confirmed that he was suffering from multiple myeloma and battling a cancer that affects blood cells in his bone marrow. He first got the bad news of his diagnosis in August 2013 and has been battling the illness ever since.

Brokaw first started with NBC News in 1966 and, since retiring from the anchor seat in 2014, has stayed on with the network, working on various special projects. Even while battling cancer Brokaw has popped up with reports and interviews, proving that even what could have been a deadly disease was not going to slow him down.

Just last week, Brokaw was part of a presidential delegation that traveled to Belgium to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Battle of the Bulge. It was an experience that he chose to share, along with his good news, in an email to his colleagues:

To My NBC Family,

A year ago my future was more uncertain than I cared to acknowledge but now I face the New Year with very encouraging news. The cancer is in remission and I will shortly go on a drug maintenance regimen to keep it there.

Last weekend I was reminded of how fortunate we all are and whatever challenges I faced were footnotes compared to the men I was with. I was a Presidential delegate to the 70th anniversary of the Battle of the Bulge, the fight which went on for most of December 1944, in one of the worst winters in 20th century Europe. Hitler tried to break the advance on Germany by throwing 200k of his best troops, tanks and artillery at the Americans who were outnumbered almost 3-1. Monty Meigs and I went into the forest surrounding Bastogne where remains of the original 101st Div fox holes still are visible. They slept in heavy snow, water pooled at the bottom, eating cold rations. About 30 vets returned. The oldest was 96 and the youngest 89. One Airborne old timer kept struggling to lift himself out of his wheelchair when the occasion called for a salute. I finally whispered to him, "Stay seated. No one will give you KP for not standing." We both had a good laugh.

The King and Queen of Belgium attended many of the ceremonies and could not have been more cordial. I flew home reflecting again on how lucky we are that generation gave us the lives we have today — how my last year was a challenge but I was meeting it in world class hospitals with brilliant physicians, not in a foxhole in the Ardennes.

Happy New Year all.

Clearly Brokaw has a lot to celebrate this holiday season, and it looks like we can expect to see more of his work heading into 2015.

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