Facing impeachment and a possible criminal indictment, Richard M. Nixon knew on Aug. 8, 1974, that the following day he would resign the presidency.
But in those waning hours before his political power vanished, Nixon made three final court nominations. Among them was Donald Alsop, a New Ulm attorney who would be elevated to Minnesota's U.S. District Court.
Alsop got word of the nomination that day, then went home to watch the man who nominated him go on television and tell the nation from the Oval Office that he would end his presidency the next day, brought down by the scandal of Watergate.
"It was a momentous event," Alsop said of the resignation, surveying a spread of newspapers he collected from that day, with their towering "Nixon Resigns" headlines.
Alsop, now 86, has served as a federal judge ever since, rising to chief and presiding over such high profile cases as the Virginia Piper kidnapping, which involved a $1 million ransom for an Orono woman, and the Dalkon Shield lawsuit.
He owes his career to Nixon's last-minute efforts and a stroke of bipartisan help from a trio of Minnesota heavyweights: Democratic Senators Hubert H. Humphrey and Walter Mondale and Republican Rep. Ancher Nelsen.
"What we did back then with Alsop, you wouldn't hardly see anymore," Mondale said.
Alsop doesn't know why Nixon turned to sign his nomination on his last full day as president — it "was the last thing on his plate," Alsop said — and can only speculate about his good fortune. He said Time Magazine reported Nixon did it to show the government was still running. Nixon historian Stanley Kutler said he's surprised the nominations even went through, because Nixon "was a cooked goose at that time."