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Our student residence, The Student Village at Luther College, welcomes residents from ALL post-secondary institutions in Regina. Rooms come with a meal plan, free laundry, free wi-fi, and a great sense of community.
Luther College is the first choice for high school to university transition. Enjoy all the benefits of a larger campus, without feeling lost in the crowd. Our community is full of caring mentors and peers to ensure a positive student experience.
The Luther Library has over 24,000 items in its collection, 5,000 books checked out per year, and 7,000 students who come through its door per month.
Every degree program at Luther College offers a study abroad option and an optional experiential learning component where you gain real world experience and get paid while going to school!
Eating better means studying better. The Luther Cafeteria offers fresh, healthy, nutritious meals seven days a week with a self-serve “all-you-care-to-eat” concept students prefer.
Wondering where to live? Our student residence, The Student Village at Luther College, is considered the best choice for first-year student accommodation. Individual private rooms mean you can stick to your own schedule and you never have to deal with roommate hassles.
Luther College offers Bundles programs that group together first-year students and classes to give you a great start and help ease the transition from high school to university.
Luther College appeals to students who want to study in a safe, nurturing, and inclusive environment. We welcome students of all faiths, ethnicities, backgrounds, religions, genders, and sexual orientations.
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Benjamin Salloum has taught at Luther College at the University of Regina for four years. He holds a B.A. (Hons.) and an M.A. from the University of Regina. His M.A. thesis, consisting of a study of the late novels of Philip Roth, analyzed the social role of the novelist as one of many competing “narrators” of private lives. Currently, his research interests include twentieth century Eastern European writers; secrecy, laughter, and the novel; and a comparative analysis between Canadian and Scandinavian literature.
ENGL 100 - Critical Reading and Writing I
ENGL 110 - Critical Reading and Writing II
“You Shouldn’t Trouble Yourself Over My Tiny Opacity”: Secrecy and the Novelist in Exit Ghost” presented at Roth @ 80, Newark, NJ, March 2013.