Well, profound knowledge of German is required from the paper. "Ich-bin-ein-Berliner" phraseology is thus insufficient.
To check the language ability a single page is adequate, I think. Fortunately, Frey makes no use of the eerie nested sentences, which are so widespread in the German technical literature.
However, since November 2004 I'm sitting in a military camp in the dunes of Southern Iraq, so there is, if ever, merely the Fata Morgana of a scanner to be seen at the horizon. Consequently, page 1 of the paper I've produced on the keyboard. It would be thus utmost nice if one of the listmembers closer to civilization would scan the article. Integration of the graphics into a pdf file as well as the upload is no problem, for I have a good connection based upon ale to the Brits and their technical equipment here. If Frey should really prohibits the online paper (s.th. I do not expect) then the file is to be deleted, of course - but with some delay. But that goes without saying.
 
_Dierk
 
 
----- Original Message -----
From: Andy
Sent: Thursday, January 06, 2005 2:35 AM
Subject: [Megillot] test page

How can we tell from one page, sixty percent of which is the note, whether "it is actually understandable what Frey is
talking about"?   By the way, the book is not in the local library (Trinity Western University), so please upload the article.
Andrew

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