361 research outputs found

    Animating the Mission in the First-Year Incentive Program

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    US Real Estate Investment Performance: 1983-2012

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    This study provides an overview of real estate investment performance over a 1983-2012 time period. The results show that although equity REITs outperformed all other assets on average annual return, on a risk-adjusted basis both private retail and apartment real estate outperformed all other assets. The study also found a recent trend in increased correlation between common stocks and REITs

    Truman Capote and the Canon

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    Rediscovering Frank O\u27Connor

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    Minor twentieth-century Irish writers such as Frank O\u27Connor have largely been neglected by a critical era which favors longer, more experimental fiction, following James Joyce\u27s models. Both in practice and in theory, Frank O\u27Connor set standards for the modern short story beyond its current misconception as a narrative form shorter than the novel. Still, as a master of his genre and a significant contributor to his nation\u27s literary renaissance, Frank O\u27Connor\u27s reputation has faded in recent years; This thesis will attempt to account for the decline in O\u27Connor\u27s reputation and to reexamine his artistry in terms of his range and depth of characterization and manipulation of narrative technique. O\u27Connor\u27s characters constituted a diverse population of romantic idealists, soldiers, and priests, among others, though he is best known for highly-anthologized stories about children. Each of O\u27Connor\u27s character groups provides a significant quantity of entertaining, realistic stories which deserve further critical attention. This thesis will explore the techniques O\u27Connor employed in his short fiction, with the dual purpose of demonstrating the focus and insight of individual stories and judging anew the literary reputation of the artist himself

    Critical introductions to pioneering works of social realism from the early Abbey Theatre

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    This dissertation presents a critical study of five dramatic works first performed at Dublin\u27s Abbey Theatre in the early twentieth century. The plays considered here have often been called masterpieces by critics, yet they have received little serious scholarly attention and today are forgotten relics of the Abbey\u27s past. Nonetheless, these plays---Padraic Colum\u27s Thomas Muskerry (1910), St. John Ervine\u27s John Ferguson (1915), T. C. Murray\u27s Autumn Fire (1924), Lennox Robinson\u27s The Big House (1926), and Teresa Deevy\u27s Katie Roche (1936)---formed a backbone for the fledgling national theater. They were successful because they attracted and engaged their audiences, but furthermore they challenged conventional notions (sometimes creating alternate notions) of gender, class, nationality, and social status. As serious dramatic works, these plays represented probably the most successful achievement of Yeats\u27s vision for the theater as a mirror showing the nation a true image of its mind and features. Thus, the plays helped to invent Ireland (in the words of Declan Kiberd\u27s important study of Irish literature), and they contributed significantly to the Abbey\u27s establishment as one of the world\u27s great repertory theaters. This dissertation, then, redresses critical neglect of the five plays in an attempt to initiate deeper ways of understanding and interpreting them through social, political, and economic contexts, textual backgrounds, and critical, publication, and stage histories

    Limitations on an Accused\u27s Right to Counsel

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