they're called pool memorandua. two of the judges -- justices are not part of that pool. but that is just a regular pool. you do that almost every day. i like to have that done on the weekend before the conference, which is normally on friday. that is a part of your work day, that you do not normally think about. it is routine, like brushing your teeth. and it is continuous. as far as preparing for argued cases, those are the ones that we have said we will hear, there are two wait to argue. there is riveting and then in the courtroom, the oral argument. -- there is writing and then in the courtroom, the oral argument. most of your job is reading their written arguments. we have done this before and a lot of these areas we have worked on before whether it is the fourth amendment, fifth amendment, whether it is the first amendment -- you are getting another iteration of an old problem. you're getting another view, another aspect of it, but it is not brand new. it is not perry mason. it is not some mysterious thing going on. we know where the law is going and this is just an