By Barbara Curtin
Salem Oregon (AP)
The Salem-based Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages has projects in the works from Siberia to rural India to the mountains of Bolivia.
But ask to interview Dr. Gregory D.S. Anderson, who has two degrees in linguistics, and you’ll wind up at a table in the Coffee House Cafe. That’s because the institute’s base is the den of the southeast Salem home that its director shares with his wife, their two sons, a cat and a dog.
Salem Oregon (AP)
The Salem-based Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages has projects in the works from Siberia to rural India to the mountains of Bolivia.
But ask to interview Dr. Gregory D.S. Anderson, who has two degrees in linguistics, and you’ll wind up at a table in the Coffee House Cafe. That’s because the institute’s base is the den of the southeast Salem home that its director shares with his wife, their two sons, a cat and a dog.