As a journalist in
Minneapolis and
Saint Paul, Minnesota, Rosholt was the head writer for the radio personality
Cedric Adams at
WCCO. He also worked for the
Associated Press in Minneapolis. In 1957, following the launch of
Sputnik by the
Soviet Union, Rosholt was the first American journalist to report that the successful launch signified a new age of space exploration, not just a defeat of the
United States in the race to be first to enter space. For this report, Rosholt was awarded the Distinguished Journalist Award by Sigma Delta Chi (now known as the
Society of Professional Journalists Sigma Delta Chi Award.) From 1960 to 1962, Rosholt represented Lutheran Film Associates in the distribution of the motion picture
Question 7. In 1962, Rosholt started working for
NBC News in
Philadelphia at
WRCV-TV. In 1964, he represented
NBC for the News Election Service, supervising the collection of votes for NES in three states. In 1966, he transferred to
New York City, writing for WNBC radio. Following his reports on the August 1967 riots in
Newark, New Jersey, he was promoted to the
Huntley-Brinkley Report. During the final years of the Huntley-Brinkley Report and during the period of time that
David Brinkley was anchor of the
NBC Nightly News, Rosholt was a
field producer, notably covering the
Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, which won
Emmys in every category of television news coverage. He also covered the U.S. - U.S.S.R. Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (
SALT), the
Sadat-Begin Peace Talks, the
William Calley trial, several
Civil Rights demonstrations, anti-
Vietnam War protests and national political conventions from 1964 to 1988. In 1972, when
John Chancellor took over as anchor of the
NBC Nightly News, Chancellor selected Rosholt as his personal producer and head editor. They worked together until Chancellor was replaced by
Tom Brokaw. Transferring to NBC News Computers, Rosholt finished his career rising to the level of director and retiring in 1988. ==Vesterheim Museum==