SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
                Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
               Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No. __)

                             Filed by the Registrant

                  x Filed by a Party other than the Registrant

                           Check the appropriate box:

[ ]  Preliminary Proxy Statement

[ ]  Confidential,  for Use of the  Commission  only  (as  permitted  by Rule
     14a-6(e)(2))

[ ]  Definitive Proxy Statement

[X]  Definitive Additional Materials

[ ]  Soliciting Material Pursuant to 240.14a-11(c) or 240.14a-12


                        DWS RREEF Real Estate Fund, Inc.
                      DWS RREEF Real Estate Fund, Inc. II
                (Name of Registrants as Specified in Its Charter)

                             SUSAN L. CICIORA TRUST
                          ALASKA TRUST COMPANY, TRUSTEE
                                SUSAN L. CICIORA
                                 RICHARD I. BARR
                                 JOEL W. LOONEY
                           c/o Stephen C. Miller, Esq.
                          and Joel L. Terwilliger, Esq.
                           2344 Spruce Street, Suite A
                                Boulder, CO 80302
                                  (303)442-2156
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

               Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

x    No fee required

     Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11

(1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(3) Per-unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant to
Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee is
calculated and state how it was determined):

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(5) Total fee paid:

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

     Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

     Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
0-11(a)(2)  and  identify  the  filing  for  which the  offsetting  fee was paid
previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration  statement  number, or
the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

(1) Amount Previously Paid:______________________________________

(2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:________________

(3) Filing Party:________________________________________________

(4) Date Filed:__________________________________________________



Dear fellow stockholders of SRQ and SRO:

It's  time  to  fire  Deutsche  Bank's  affiliated   advisers,   Deutsche  Asset
Management,  Inc.  and RREEF  America,  LLC. We believe  they  continue to waste
stockholders'  money - our money - by fighting our proposals rather than working
efficiently to move our investments in a different direction.

The Susan L. Ciciora  Trust, a large  stockholder in both SRQ and SRO,  received
communications  from the funds'  legal  counsel  regarding  the  Trust's  recent
preliminary  proxy statement.  We believe the claims they made are without merit
and are  examples of how  current  management  for  SRQ/SRO is wasting  time and
stockholders'  money  fighting  our  proposals.  We  think  it's  important  for
stockholders  to know how current  management  is spending  stockholders'  money
fighting the Trust's proposals. Thus, we are making our correspondence available
to you,  and you can make  your own  determination.  You  deserve  to know  what
current  management  is doing and how the Trust is  responding  to, we  believe,
expensive delaying tactics.

The Trust believes that the Deutsche Bank  affiliated  advisers,  Deutsche Asset
Management,  Inc. and RREEF America, LLC, should be terminated immediately,  and
that  management  should  introduce  other  stockholder   "friendly"   corporate
governance changes. It's time to call the annual meeting of stockholders so that
we can stand together and bring about change!

Best regards from a fellow stockholder,

Stewart R. Horejsi
Representative for the Susan L. Ciciora Trust




                             Susan L. Ciciora Trust
                           2344 Spruce Street, Suite A
                             Boulder, Colorado 80302
            c/o Stephen C. Miller, Esq. or Joel L. Terwilliger, Esq.
                                 (303) 442-2156

                                  June 23, 2009

VIA EDGAR AND OVERNIGHT COURIER

U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission
John Grzeskiewicz, Esq.
Division of Investment Management
100 F Street, N.E.
Washington, DC 20549

     RE: Preliminary Proxy Statement of DWS RREEF Real Estate Fund, Inc. and DWS
     RREEF Real Estate Fund II, Inc. [accession numbers 0001099343-09-000078 and
     0001099343-09-000079]  -  (collectively,   the  "Funds")(the   "Preliminary
     Proxy")

Dear Mr. Grzeskiewicz:

Thank you for your time the other day  regarding  the Susan L.  Ciciora  Trust's
(the  "Trust")  preliminary  proxy as filed on June 6, 2009.  This  letter is in
response to the remarks of Ropes & Gray, the Funds' legal counsel,  contained in
a letter  dated June 15,  2009  regarding  the  Preliminary  Proxy (the  "Funds'
Letter").

By way of  introduction,  the Trust  disagrees with the assertions in the Funds'
Letter  that  the  Trust's  Preliminary  Proxy  contains  statements  which  are
"materially misleading" or omitted. First and foremost, the general tenor of the
Funds'  Letter  overlooks a key point:  the  Preliminary  Proxy is just that,  a
preliminary  proxy.  Accordingly,  any  assertion by fund counsel that  material
information required per Schedule 14A was omitted by the Trust is premature. The
Trust notes that the accusatory tenor of the letter  mischaracterizes  omissions
as  "materially   misleading",   which   omissions  are  actually   self-evident
placeholder  "blanks"  contained in a  preliminary  proxy with respect to record
date,  scheduling of the Funds' 2009 annual meeting,  and other disclosures that
should have already been dealt with by the Funds.

Thus,  it bears  repeating  that the context of the Trust's  filing is that of a
contesting  proxy which  presupposes that the Funds will not wholly fail to take
action to issue notice of a 2009 annual meeting and  distribute  their own proxy
statement to stockholders containing the required information. When the Funds do
so,  then  the  Trust  may rely  upon and  incorporate  this  information  where
necessary  in  a  definitive  and  subsequently  disseminated  contesting  proxy
statement.  Accordingly, any assertion by fund counsel that material information
required per Schedule 14A was omitted by the Trust is premature and in disregard
of the fact that the Funds are the  expected  and proper  source of the  omitted
information.


Set forth below are the Trust's responses to the Funds' Letter. The remarks made
by fund  counsel are  reproduced  in bold text,  and are followed by the Trust's
responses.  The  responses  are provided via a general  statement  followed by a
specific response to each specific remark in the order in which the remarks were
set  out  in  numbered   paragraphs  in  the  Funds'  Letter  and  are  numbered
correspondingly.  Unless otherwise noted in this letter,  the Trust believes the
information  supplied in its response has  addressed the remarks of fund counsel
and is solely responsible for that information.

Response to the Remarks of the Funds -Preliminary Proxy filed by the Trust

Paragraph Number 1 of the Funds' Letter asserts:

The Trust's proxy statement omits  information  required to be included therein.
The Trust's proxy statement omits material  information required by Schedule 14A
and is, therefore, not compliant with Rule 14a-3(a),  including the record date,
the date of the annual meetings and information related to beneficial  ownership
(the  current  table is not as of a recent  date and is  inaccurate).  While the
Trust may omit  certain  information  under  Rule  14a-5(c)  to the extent it is
included  in the Funds'  proxy  statements,  in the past the Staff has taken the
position  that it  would  be  inappropriate  for a  shareholder  to rely on Rule
14a-5(c) until the issuer  distributes its proxy  statement.  We believe that it
would  not be  consistent  with the  rules of the  Commission  for the  Trust to
solicit proxies until it is able to include all required  information or rely on
Rule 14a-5(c) therefor.

The Trust's response:

As explained in the introductory  comments above, the Trust confirms that it has
omitted  certain  disclosures  required by applicable  law(1) in anticipation of
relying  on Rule  14a-5(c)  with  respect  to  information  expected  to be (and
typically) included in proxy statements.

The Trust does not  intend to  disseminate  its  definitive  proxy  prior to the
filing  and  distribution  of the Funds'  proxy  statement  for the 2009  annual
meeting. Any determination by the Trust to disseminate its proxy statement prior
to the  distribution  of the Funds' proxy statement would be made in the context
of the Funds' failure to distribute the required information to shareholders and
with  express  understanding  that the Trust would be required to  undertake  to
furnish all required disclosures.

In regard to  self-evident  omissions to disclose record date, time and place of
the annual meeting and similar matters, this again highlights the failure of the
Funds thus far to provide any required disclosures in any proxy statement.  This
common  predicament of activist  shareholders is typically  addressed by leaving
blanks in the preliminary  proxy that can be filled in when the registrant makes
the information available to its security holders.


Certainly,  blanks in a preliminary  contested proxy are to be expected - that's
why it is preliminary - and the Trust presumes that fund counsel understands the
distinction  between a preliminary and a definitive  proxy  statement.  When the
Funds  undertake  their  obligations  to set a  record  date and  provide  other
material information to the stockholders, the Trust will respond accordingly.

Paragraph Number 2 of the Funds' Letter asserts:

The  Trust's  proxy  statement  fails  to  identify  all  "participants"  in the
solicitation  as  required  by Item  4(a)(2) of Schedule  14A.  Item  4(a)(2) of
Schedule 14A  requires  that all  "participants"  (as defined in  Instruction  3
thereto) in the  solicitation  be named in the proxy  statement and  information
with respect  thereto  provided.  It appears that, at a minimum,  Mr.  [Stewart]
Horejsi is a participant in the  solicitation and has not been properly named or
described  in the  Trust's  proxy  statement.  It is  possible  that the various
investment advisors affiliated with Mr. Horejsi may also be participants.

The Trust's response:

The Preliminary Proxy includes all  "participants" as defined and as required to
be  identified  as  such  by  the   instructions  for  Schedule  14A.  The  term
"participant" is defined in Instruction 3 to Item 4 of Schedule 14A and includes
nominees for directors as deemed participants.  All nominees are included in the
Preliminary Proxy.

Investment advisors and key personnel are not "participants"  solely as a result
of  status.  As  stated  in  the  instructions,   the  terms  "participant"  and
"participant in a solicitation" do not include:

     (iii) any person  employed by a  participant  in the  capacity of attorney,
     accountant,  or advertising,  public  relations or financial  adviser,  and
     whose  activities are limited to the duties required to be performed in the
     course of such employment;
     (iv) any  person  regularly  employed  as an  officer  or  employee  of the
     registrant or any of its subsidiaries who is not otherwise a participant

(emphasis added).  Further, where a person acts in a financial adviser capacity,
i.e.,  "whose  activities are limited to the duties  required to be performed in
the course of such employment," such person would not be deemed a participant in
the proxy  solicitation.  Mr. Horejsi is a financial advisor to the Trust and as
such clearly falls within the precepts of (iii) and/or (iv) above.  The Trust is
an  irrevocable  private  family  trust  established  by Susan L.  Ciciora  (the
daughter  of Mr.  Horejsi)  for the benefit of her issue and her brother and his
issue.  Mr. Stewart  Horejsi is not a trustee of or beneficiary  under the Trust
and has no beneficial interest in shares of the Funds.

In conclusion, this assertion is without merit.


Paragraph Number 3 of the Funds' Letter asserts:

The Trust's proxy  statement  cites the Lipper ranking of The Denali Fund within
the performance  analysis  category for real estate funds, but fails to disclose
that subsequent to Mr. Horejsi's taking control of that fund it has been removed
from the real estate category. The Trust repeatedly reports that The Denali Fund
"Ranks #1 in the Lipper  Closed End Equity Fund  Performance  Analysis  for Real
Estate Funds" for the one and five-year period ended December 31, 2008. However,
the Trust fails to disclose that effective June 8, 2009, Lipper has subsequently
removed The Denali Fund from the real estate  category and  reclassified it into
the "Core Funds"  category in view of changes to the  portfolio  holdings of The
Denali Fund made by Mr. Horejsi subsequent to his taking control of that fund.

The Trust's response:

The following are  indisputable  facts:  The Denali Fund ("DNY")  indeed won the
Lipper Performance  Achievement  Certificates as stated in the Preliminary Proxy
for the one and five  year  periods  ending  December  31,  2008,  and the Trust
correctly  stated the category for which it won the Lipper awards.  Lipper bases
its awards on past performance for specified  periods of time, i.e., for the one
and five year periods ending December 31, 2008, and uses classifications  deemed
appropriate  by  Lipper.  Awards  for  past  performance  are not  qualified  by
prospective classification change down the road.

DNY was only very  recently  reclassified  by Lipper  into  their  "Core  Funds"
category due to recent changes to DNY's portfolio  holdings.  However,  Lipper's
recent reclassification comes after the time period for which DNY won the awards
and has no bearing on the Lipper awards themselves,  since the  reclassification
occurred subsequent to DNY's receipt of the awards.

Further,  the  suggestion by fund counsel that DNY was  "removed"  from the real
estate  category to the core funds  category is  misleading.  Never having won a
Lipper award,  the Funds are likely not familiar with this  distinction  and how
the award is designated  based on performance  over a specified  period of time,
i.e., for the one and five year periods ending  December 31, 2008.  Accordingly,
the Trust  suggests  that fund  counsel  contact  Lipper to learn more about how
Lipper classifies closed-end funds and designates award winners such as DNY.

In conclusion, this assertion is without merit.

Paragraph Number 4 of the Funds' Letter asserts:

The Trust's proxy statement misrepresents the results of the special meetings to
vote upon a  liquidation  proposal for each Fund.  The Trust's  proxy  statement
repeatedly states that the Funds' liquidation  proposals were "soundly defeated"
at the Funds'  recent  special  meetings.  He also states  that the  liquidation
proposals were defeated by an "overwhelming majority" of the shareholders.  Both
of  these  statements  are  misleading.   As  publicly  announced  by  SRO,  the
liquidation proposal received over twice as many votes "for" as it did "against"
votes.  SRO did not receive the required  vote of a majority of the  outstanding
shares in order to carry the proposal.  In SRQ, of the unaffiliated shares voted
(excluding  shares voted by Mr.  Horejsi),  the  liquidation  proposal  received
approximately  54%  of the  votes  cast  "against"  and  46%  "for,"  hardly  an
"overwhelming" majority.


The Trust's response:

Fund counsel did not show the actual voting  numbers,  presumably  since they do
not support their assertions in #4. Here are the numbers for SRQ:



   FOR management's proposal            AGAINST management's proposal          Abstain
   ------------------------------------ -------------------------------------- -------
                                                                         
   2,898,268                            5,995,333                              123,457



For SRQ, the board of  director's  proposal to liquidate  was defeated by a more
than a 2 - 1 vote tally. This is clearly a "soundly defeated" proposal for which
an "overwhelming majority" of stockholders who voted voted "against". By parsing
numbers (i.e.,  excluding shares voted by the Trust), fund counsel suggests that
the  Trust's  shares  should  not count  (which is  consistent  with the  Funds'
treatment of the Trust  notwithstanding its status as a significant  stockholder
in the Funds) in the overall vote tally.  Thus,  for SRQ, this  assertion by the
Funds is  without  merit.  It should  also be noted that fund  counsel  uses the
nomenclature  "he" when  referring to the  proponent of the  Preliminary  Proxy.
Ostensibly this is a reference to Mr. Horejsi and the Trust clarifies again that
it is the Trust,  not Mr.  Horejsi,  setting  forth the  proposals  in the Proxy
Statement.

Regarding  SRO, if the  intention  of fund  counsel is to convey that the actual
voting  tally for SRO was unable to garner  sufficient  stockholder  approval to
pass the  liquidation  proposal,  the Trust  will  accommodate  this  disclosure
objective. As such, we believe the language is not "materially misleading".

Paragraph Number 5 of the Funds' Letter asserts:

The  Trust's  proxy  statement  contains  numerous  statements  that  impugn the
character, integrity and personal reputation of the Funds' directors, as well as
making charges of illegal or immoral conduct in violation of Rule 14a-9(b). Rule
14a-9(b) prohibits  misleading  statements that impugn the character,  integrity
and personal  reputation of the Funds'  directors,  as well as making charges of
illegal or immoral  conduct of other parties  without  factual  foundation.  The
Trust's proxy statement  contains many such statements.  For example,  the proxy
statement  contains the following  statement:  "if the Boards have the unethical
capacity to rob the Trust,  stockholders  should  figure they have the unethical
capacity  to rob the  rest of the  stockholders."  It also  states:  "The  Trust
believes that the current Boards are 'hiding' behind their  staggered  structure
to avoid  meaningful  contact with the Funds'  stockholders  to their  long-term
detriment." There is no factual support for these statements.

The Trust's response:

Fund counsel is using  incomplete and out of context quotes to make an incorrect
substantive  point.  The use of partial  quotes  does not  correctly  convey the
context of these  statements.  The Board of a well-run  investment  company with
sound corporate governance would never be referred to as "having the capacity to
rob" a major stakeholder.  It is our view that the investment  advisors selected
and   retained  by  the  Funds'   Boards  are   complacent   about   operational
under-performance,  and  the  Trust  holds  the  Boards  accountable  for  these
failings.  As detailed in the Preliminary Proxy, on virtually every major metric
of financial performance, the Funds have performed dismally.


The Trust's  statements  are noted as its view and  opinion.  For  example,  the
incompletely quoted phrase "if the Boards have the unethical capacity to rob the
Trust,  stockholders  should figure they have the unethical  capacity to rob the
rest of the stockholders" is clearly qualified at the beginning of the statement
in which it appears and which reads,  "But from the Trust's point of view,  it's
robbery..." and placed in context at the end of the statement  which reads,  "Is
that the kind of board you want representing your interests?" This clearly is an
expression of opinion by the Trust regarding the Funds' poison pill and Maryland
Control Shares Acquisition Act opt-in.

Moreover,  Rule 14a-9  addresses  negative  statements  regarding  character  or
conduct that are misleading because factually unsupported. We do not believe any
statements  lack  factual  support,  but will  rephrase the content to ensure no
ambiguity that the views are opinion and consider other  descriptive  terms with
narrower ordinary meaning,

In conclusion, this assertion is without merit.

Paragraph Number 6 of the Funds' Letter asserts:

The Trust's proxy statement cites blog entries as articles and fails to identify
the  author  thereof.  The  Trust's  proxy  statement  cites  blog  postings  on
www.seekingalpha.com  as  articles  and  does not cite  the  author  thereof  in
violation of Rule 14a-12(c)(2).

The Trust's response:

Fund  counsel  failed to cite a single  example  of a blog  entry  contained  in
Preliminary  Proxy which does not contain a reference  to the  original  author.
Accordingly, this assertion is unfounded.

Paragraph Number 7 of the Funds' Letter asserts:

The Trust repeatedly states that there is "no vote requirement  associated" with
its precatory  proposals.  In order for a precatory  proposal to be adopted as a
recommendation by the stockholders,  it must receive an affirmative  majority of
the votes present and entitled to vote on the matters.

The Trust's response:

Fund counsel did not specify which proposals by the Trust are  "precatory";  the
Trust  presumes  that they  understand  Proposals 1, 2, and 3 are not  precatory
proposals  and do in fact  specify the required  vote for the binding  effect of
these  proposals  (which  binding  effect is within the  authority of the Funds'
stockholders).


In regard to the  remaining  Proposals 4 - 13, the Funds'  respective  boards of
directors may decline to include them in the Funds' own proxy under  14a-8(i)(1)
as such a  precatory  proposal(s)  is the not  proper  subject  for any  legally
binding action by stockholders,  as the Trust acknowledges here(2). However, the
Trust is not seeking to include Proposals 4 - 13 in the Funds' proxy, but rather
in its  own  proxy.  Additionally,  the  Trust  states  that  "there  is no vote
requirement  associated  with" these proposals  because they are non-binding and
concern matters currently vested  exclusively in the board of directors for each
Fund.

Thus,  whether the final vote tally on any of  Proposals 4 - 13 is 40%,  50%, or
even 90% of those stockholders  present and eligible to vote makes no difference
as to the  legal  effect  of the vote on  these  Proposals  4 - 13.  They do not
involve  matters  that require a binding  stockholder  vote because the right to
take the  necessary  action is vested in the board of directors  for each of the
Funds. Consequently, the effect of an affirmative vote on these initiatives is a
non-binding  referendum  (as correctly  portrayed in the  Preliminary  Proxy) to
express  dissatisfaction  with the current  corporate  governance  structure and
performance of the Funds.

The Trust firmly  believes that precatory  proposals have played a vital role in
fostering effective and constructive  communication between stockholders and the
funds they own. Courts in many states have specifically affirmed the legality of
precatory proposals.  See, for example, Auer v. Dressel, 306 N.Y. 427, 432 (N.Y.
1954) (holding that stockholder  proposal where stockholders  expressed approval
of former  president's  conduct,  and demanded that  directors  place the former
president  back in office was proper under state law).  In fact,  in a series of
roundtable   discussions,   the  SEC  acknowledged  that  stockholder  proposals
submitted  through  Rule 14a-8  have been a source of  significant  progress  in
corporate  governance,  as many of the prevailing  "best  practices"  were first
introduced through so-called precatory proposals.  See comments,  Securities and
Exchange Commission, 17 CFR PART 240, [Release No. 34-56160;  IC-27913; File No.
S7-16-07.

The Trust believes that  stockholders of the Funds have the right to communicate
with the boards of directors  regarding  their  oversight and  governance of the
Funds, and submits Proposals 4 - 13 in furtherance of communicating to the board
of directors ongoing dissatisfaction with their job performance. The response by
fund counsel with respect to these  non-binding  proposals - attempting to "kick
them  out"  of  the   Preliminary   Proxy  -  is  simply   illustrative  of  the
non-responsiveness  of  the  board  of  directors  to  legitimate  stockholders'
concerns.

If fund counsel is suggesting that the board of directors will agree to abide by
the stockholders'  approval of these precatory proposals (4 - 13) then the Trust
may amend the  Preliminary  Proxy such that these  proposals,  if approved by an
affirmative  majority of the votes  present and entitled to vote on the matters,
are binding in full force and effect on the Funds and their respective boards of
directors.


I appreciate  your time and  consideration  in this matter,  and am available at
your convenience if you have any questions. I remain,

Yours truly

/s/ Joel L. Terwilliger

Joel L. Terwilliger, Esq.
2344 Spruce Street Suite A
Boulder, CO 80302

With copies to:    Vincent Di Stefano, Esq. - Securities and Exchange Commission
                   David A. Fine, Esq.
                   John W. Gerstmayr, Esq.
                   J. Christopher Jackson, Esq.
                   Rita Rubin, Esq.
                   James Wall, Esq.


Footnotes:

(1) E.g., among other things, information concerning the compensation of the
Funds' executive officers, an analysis of cumulative total returns on an
investment in the Funds' shares during the past five years and the procedures
for submitting proposals for inclusion in the Funds' proxy statement at the 2010
annual meeting,

(2) A precatory proposal is an advisory suggestion that directors are not
legally bound to enforce. This type of proposal is usually phrased in the form
of a request.



ROPES &GRAY LLP
ONE INTERNATIONAL PLACE
BOSTON, MA 02110-2624
WWW.ROPESGRAY.COM


June 15,2009
                                                                   David A. Fine
                                                               617-951-7473 617-
                                                                    235-0030 fax
                                                        David.fine@ropesgray.com

BY EDGAR & FEDERAL EXPRESS

U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
100 F Street, NE Washington, DC 20549
Attn: Vincent DeStefano

Re: Preliminary Proxy Statement ofDWS RREEF Real Estate Fund, Inc. (Registration
No.  81121172)  and DWS  RREEF  Real  Estate  Fund II,  Inc.  (Registration  No.
811-21340)

Dear Mr. DeStefano:

On behalf ofour clients,  DWS RREEF Real Estate Fund, Inc. ("SRQ") and DWS RREEF
Real Estate Fund II, Inc.  ("SRO") (SRQ and SRO together,  the "Funds"),  we are
writing  to  bring  to  the  Staffs  attention  what  we  believe  are  material
misstatements  and omissions  contained in the preliminary proxy statement filed
on June 8, 2009 (the "proxy  statement") by Susan L. Ciciora Trust (the "Trust")
with respect to the yet to be determined  annual meetings of stockholders  ofthe
Funds. The Funds believe that absent  corrections to certain  statements made in
these proxy materials,  the Trust's proxy statement is materially  misleading to
the Funds' stockholders in violation of Rule 14a 9. These concerns are set forth
below.  We wish to note that the Trust  repeats many ofthese same  statements on
its soliciting website, www.srgsro.com.

     1. The Trust's proxy  statement omits  information  required to be included
     therein. The Trust's proxy statement omits material information required by
     Schedule 14A and is, therefore, not compliant with Rule 14a-3(a), including
     the record date, the date ofthe annual meetings and information  related to
     beneficial  ownership  (the current table is not as of a recent date and is
     inaccurate).  While the  Trust  may omit  certain  information  under  Rule
     14a-5(c) to the extent it is included in the Funds'  proxy  statements,  in
     the past the Staffhas taken the position that it would be inappropriate for
     a shareholder  to rely on Rule 14a-5(c)  until the issuer  distributes  its
     proxy statement.  We believe that it would not be consistent with the rules
     of the  Commission  for the Trust to  solicit  proxies  until it is able to
     include all required information or rely on Rule 14a-5(c) therefor.

     2. The Trust's proxy statement fails to identify all  "participants" in the
     solicitation  as required by Item 4(a)(2) of Schedule  14A. Item 4(a)(2) of
     Schedule 14A requires that all  "participants" (as defined in Instruction 3
     thereto) in the solicitation be named in the proxy



ROPES & GRAY LLP

Securities and Exchange Commission -2 -June 15,2009

     statement and information with respect thereto  provided.  It appears that,
     at a minimum,  Mr. Horejsi is a participant in the solicitation and has not
     been  properly  named or described in the Trust's  proxy  statement.  It is
     possible that the various investment  advisors  affiliated with Mr. Horejsi
     may also be participants.

     3. The Trust's proxy  statement cites the Lipper ranking of The Denali Fund
     within the performance  analysis  category for real estate funds, but fails
     to disclose that subsequent to Mr. Horejsi's taking control of that fund it
     has been  removed  from the real  estate  category.  The  Trust  repeatedly
     reports that The Denali Fund "Ranks #1 in the Lipper  ClosedEnd Equity Fund
     Performance  Analysis  for Real  Estate  Funds"  for the one and  five-year
     period ended December 31, 2008.  However,  the Trust fails to disclose that
     effective  June 8, 2009,  Lipper has  subsequently  removed The Denali Fund
     from the real estate  category  and  reclassified  it into the "Core Funds"
     category in view of changes to the  portfolio  holdings  ofThe  Denali Fund
     made by Mr. Horejsi subsequent to his taking control ofthat fund.

     4. The Trust's  proxy  statement  misrepresents  the results of the special
     meetings to vote upon a  liquidation  proposal  for each Fund.  The Trust's
     proxy statement  repeatedly  states that the Funds'  liquidation  proposals
     were "soundly  defeated" at the Funds'  recent  special  meetings.  He also
     states that the  liquidation  proposals  were defeated by an  "overwhelming
     majority" of the shareholders.  Both ofthese statements are misleading.  As
     publicly announced by SRO, the liquidation  proposal received over twice as
     many  votes  "for"  as it did  "against"  votes.  SRO did not  receive  the
     required vote of a majority ofthe outstanding  shares in order to carry the
     proposal. In SRQ, ofthe unaffiliated shares voted (excluding shares vote by
     Mr. Horejsi),  the liquidation  proposal  received  approximately 54% ofthe
     votes cast "against" and 46% "for," hardly an "overwhelming" majority.

     5. The Trust's proxy statement contains numerous statements that impugn the
     character,  integrity and personal  reputation of the Funds' directors,  as
     well as making  charges of illegal or immoral  conduct in violation of Rule
     14a-9(b).  Rule 14a-9(b)  prohibits  misleading  statements that impugn the
     character,  integrity and personal  reputation ofthe Funds'  directors,  as
     well as making  charges  ofillegal  or  immoral  conduct  of other  parties
     without factual foundation.  The Trust's proxy statement contains many such
     statements.  For  example,  the  proxy  statement  contains  the  following
     statement:  "ifthe  Boards  have the  unethical  capacity to rob the Trust,
     stockholders should figure they have the unethical capacity to rob the rest
     ofthe  stockholders." It also states:  "The Trust believes that the current
     Boards are 'hiding'  behind their staggered  structure to avoid  meaningful
     contact with the Funds'  stockholders to their long-term  detriment." There
     is no factual support for these statements.

     6. The Trust's proxy  statement cites blog entries as articles and fails to
     identify  the  author  thereof.  The  Trust's  proxy  statement  cites blog
     postings on  www.seekingalpha.com  as articles and does not cite the author
     thereofin violation ofRule 14a-12(c)(2).



ROPES & GRAY LLP

Securities and Exchange Commission -3 -     June 15,2009

     7.  The  Trust  repeatedly  states  that  there  is  "no  vote  requirement
     associated" with its precatory proposals. In order for a precatory proposal
     to be adopted as a recommendation by the  stockholders,  it must receive an
     affirmative  majority  ofthe  votes  present  and  entitled  to vote on the
     matters.

We urge the Staff to  consider  carefully  the  issues and  concerns  raised and
require  the Trust to (i) make  appropriate  corrections,  and (ii)  caution the
Trust about soliciting with an incomplete proxy statement that does not meet the
requirements ofthe Commission's  rules. If you have any questions or comments on
this letter, please contact the undersigned at (617) 951-7473.

cc: Joel  Terwilliger,  Esq. John
W. Gerstmayr,  Esq.
J. Christopher Jackson,  Esq.
Rita Rubin, Esq. James Wall,
Esq.