PIER 1 IMPORTS INC/DE
DFRN14A, 1996-06-03
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                               SCHEDULE 14A
                     SCHEDULE 14 INFORMATION

Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of 
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Filed by the Registrant       [   ]

Filed by a Party other than the Registrant        [ X ]

Check the appropriate box:

[  ]  Preliminary Proxy Statement

[ X ]  Definitive Proxy Statement

[  ]  Definitive Additional Materials

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

Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter:

Pier 1 Imports, Inc.

Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement:

United Food & Commercial Workers Union, Local 99R

Payment of Filing Fee (check the appropriate box)

[X ] $125 per Exchange Act Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii), 14a-6(i)(1), or
     
     14a-6(j) (2).

[  ] $500 per each party to the controversy pursuant to Exchange
Act Rule 14a-6(i)(3).

[  ] Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-
6(i)(4) 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:  (1)

 _____________________________________________________________

     4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

 _____________________________________________________________ 

(1) Set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated
and state how it was determined.

[ ] 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: _________________________

     Date Filed: _______________________________

<PAGE>
<PAGE>
UFCW 99R                           
2501 West Dunlap Avenue            
Phoenix, AZ  85021   
(602) 572-2149

PROXY STATEMENT 

First sent June 3, 1996

INDEPENDENT SHAREHOLDER SOLICITATION 
FOR PROPOSALS FOR (1) EXPERT REPORT ON MAXIMIZING SHAREHOLDER
VALUE AND (2) CONFIDENTIAL SHAREHOLDER VOTING
     at 
     PIER 1 IMPORTS, INC.  
     Annual Stockholders Meeting
     June 27, 1996 10am
     Radisson Plaza Hotel
     825 Main Street
     Fort Worth TX 

Dear Fellow Pier 1 Shareholder:

     We urge you to vote FOR the proposal made by investment
manager Mark Boyar asking Pier 1 management to have an investment
bank report to management and shareholders on ways to maximize
shareholder value. Mr. Boyar's proposal is in the proxy statement
and card you have already received from management.

     Not included in that card is our confidential shareholder
voting proposal (you can vote for this proposal using the
enclosed card, attending the meeting, or on any revised card
management may send you which includes the proposal).   

A. PROPOSAL OF MARK BOYAR RECOMMENDING INVESTMENT BANK STUDY ON
MAXIMIZING SHAREHOLDER VALUE

     Mark Boyar is a New York investment manager whose firm (Mark
Boyar & Co.) held 350,000 shares of Pier 1 recently. He has no
connection to our organization. We agree with the following
shareholder proposal he has made:

     RESOLVED, that we the shareholders of Pier 1 Imports, Inc.
     request that the board of directors retain an independent
     investment banker to evaluate and report to the board on
     strategic options available to maximize shareholder value, a
     summary of such report to be made available to shareholders
     no later than three months prior to the 1997 annual meeting.

Mr. Boyar's remarks in the proxy statement appear to question
whether the stock would not have performed better were it not for
management "adopting a 'poison pill', awarding itself highly
generous bonuses, and placing some of its investment capital with
persons affiliated with a member of the board." 

     One might also include in such a list the following:

     (1) LOST INVESTMENTS: The company recently lost $19.3
million in funds it had placed with investment manager Jay
Goldinger (Capital Insight). Capital Insight also managed funds
for Pier 1's CFO Robert Herndon and for a company headed by Pier
1 director Charles R. ("Red") Scott.  After the public disclosure
of these losses and Capital Insight ceased doing business, Pier 1
was hit by several shareholder lawsuits. It fired Herndon and
auditor Price Waterhouse. It spent $1 million on an investigation
by a special committee of its board. Pier 1 and other investors
are suing Capital Insight. 

     (2) GOLDEN PARACHUTES: Pier 1's top executives have
so-called "Post-Employment Consulting Agreements."  Unlike many
companies, the severance arrangements here apply even if there
has been no change in control. An executive can quit in response
to job changes and thereby become entitled to a two-year
consulting deal at his previous salary level. If he obtains a new
and better-paying job immediately, he still gets 50% of the
payments left in the 2-year period. This severance deal is also
triggered by a discharge for anything less than wilful
misconduct. Job changes which will trigger the right to receive
pay after quitting include any reduction in title, relocation of
the executive's office more than 50 miles, or reduction in base
salary or benefits not meted out to all similarly-situated
employees.

     (3) EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION: CEO Clark Johnson received
compensation of $1,399,900 (plus stock options) in the most
recent fiscal year (ending 2/96). 
 
     Whether or not you agree with the management decisions
above, all Mr. Boyar's proposal asks for is a report from experts
on what might maximize shareholder value.  Management's remarks
in the proxy statement against this proposal do not cite any harm
which could arise from such a report. Such a report seems to us a
conservative and responsible step. We urge a vote FOR the Boyar
proposal. 

B. CONFIDENTIAL SHAREHOLDER VOTING

     Hundreds of companies have some form of confidential voting:
Pier 1 has none. Voting for leadership is, in our view, a private
matter.  Secret ballot voting is how union officials and most
government officials are elected.
 
     Shareholders often have business and personal relationships
with members of the Board which go beyond owning Pier 1 stock:
for examples, Pier 1 employees or banks or insurance companies
which rely on Pier 1 for income may fear voting stock
held in their names contrary to management's recommendation.  We
in no way suggest management has threatened to retaliate against
shareholders. However, shareholders should have the right to vote
as they see fit without having anything to fear.      

     We feel all shareholders deserve the confidentiality
accorded employees who hold through benefit plans: they have the
right to confidentially vote shares held in those plans through
the plan's trustees. These employees should be able to buy stock
outside the plans and not have to give up confidentiality in the
process. 

     As noted above, there are a number of issues at Pier 1 as to
which shareholders and management might reasonably disagree. None
of those issues are up for a vote this year, and we have no plans
in this regard, but the possibility of such votes in the future
makes confidentiality a more pressing issue.  

     Pier 1 management has not told us its position on
confidential voting, but other companies have argued against
similar proposals by claiming shareholders can get
confidentiality by placing their stock in the name of a broker or
other nominee.  If you own stock through a broker or other
nominee, you are the best judge of whether you can rely on that
organization to keep your confidences. If instead you are the
record owner, you avoid possible brokers' maintenance fees, and
may be able to get shareholder materials faster.  Record owners
have enhanced legal rights under state corporation law, such as
the right to inspect corporate records. Record owners should not
have to give up all this just to have a secret ballot vote. 

PLEASE VOTE FOR THE FOLLOWING PROPOSAL:

     Resolved, that shareholders recommend the Company adopt a
     confidential voting policy for shareholders, to which the
     only exceptions shall be disclosure to independent
     inspectors of election, or as required by law. This shall
     not be construed as preventing disclosure to management of
     information other than how the proxy card has been voted,
     such as address changes or comments.  
  
THIS SOLICITATION

     The costs of this solicitation are being borne by United
Food & Commercial Workers ("UFCW") Local 99R, which is the record
owner of 148 shares of Pier 1 common stock. We expect our
soliciting expenses will be about $2000.  We are a non-profit
organization representing employees in Arizona, primarily in the
grocery business. We are organizing Albertson's stores over
management opposition through what we feel are improper means.
Pier 1's CEO Clark Johnson is on Albertson's board of directors.
We have made similar shareholder proposals at other companies
similarly connected to Albertson's. We will present the secret
ballot proposal and vote your proxy as you direct, regardless of
the outcome of Albertson's labor situation or Johnson continuing
to sit on its board. We have sent a flier to each Pier 1 store
advising employees of their legal rights, but have no interest in
representing Pier One employees, nor are aware of any labor
dispute at Pier One.
 
VOTING RIGHTS AND PROCEDURE 
     
     At present, the only ways to vote on the confidential voting
proposal are to use the enclosed card or vote at the meeting.
Management declined our request to include our proposal on the 
card you previously received from management. If you have already
filled out that card, you can change your vote. A proxy vote may
be revoked any time prior to the meeting by (1) executing a later
proxy card; (2) appearing at the meeting to vote, or (3)
delivering the proxyholder or the Company's secretary written
notice of revocation prior to the date of the meeting: J. Rodney
Lawrence, Secretary, Pier 1 Imports, 301 Commerce Street, Suite
600, Fort Worth TX 76102, tel. (817) 878-8250; fax (817)
334-0191.  In the future management may send you a revised proxy
card. If you have already voted on the enclosed card, you can
simply throw away management's new card. 

     Our proxy card will not grant us any discretionary voting
authority: we will vote as you instruct us to vote. All holders
of common stock as of May 8, 1996 are entitled to vote. We will
keep the content of all cards we receive confidential (except
from our staff) until the meeting. At that point the cards must
be presented to the company's tabulator in order to be counted.
Survey responses identifying you will be used solely to confirm
the survey's validity and for communications concerning
shareholder voting issues.  

     Shareholder approval of these proposals would not legally
bind the board. However, we believe as a practical matter that
the board would not defy a recommendation approved by a majority
of shareholders. 

ELECTION OF DIRECTORS/ PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO EMPLOYEE STOCK
OPTION PLAN/ SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF DIRECTORS/ EXECUTIVE
COMPENSATION

     Information on these matters is contained in the Company's
proxy statement, incorporated herein by reference. We take no
position on the other matters up for a vote.

PROPOSALS FOR FUTURE MEETINGS

     SEC Rule 14a-8 gives any shareholder who has owned more than
$1000 worth of the company's stock for more than one year the
right to have the company's proxy statement include a shareholder
proposal and supporting statement. The deadline for submitting
such proposals for inclusion in the company's proxy statement
next year is January 15, 1997. 

PLEASE RETURN THE ENCLOSED PROXY CARD TODAY TO
                                        
                    William McDonough
                    President UFCW 99 
                    2501 W. Dunlap Avenue
                    Phoenix AZ
                    (602) 572-2149 tel. 

<PAGE>
UFCW SURVEY OF PIER ONE SHAREHOLDER OPINION
(this is a voluntary survey, not a proxy voting card).

1. Do you support the Boyar proposal calling for an investment
bank study of possible steps to maximize shareholder value?

          Yes  _____     No   ____  Undecided  ________

If you wish to vote on this, you need to attend the meeting or
vote by proxy card.

2. Do you support the idea of confidential voting for
shareholders?

          Yes  _____     No   ____  Undecided  ________

If you wish to vote on this, you need to attend the meeting or
vote by proxy card.

3. Do you support placing the Company's poison pill up for
shareholder vote?

          Yes  ____      No  _____  Undecided _______ 

4. Do you support putting the Company's "Post-Employment
Consulting Agreement" (executive severance plan) up for a
shareholder vote?

          Yes  ____      No  _____  Undecided _______ 

5. What is your favorite thing about the Company?

6. What is the worst thing about the Company?

7. List anything you would like management to change: 

THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION WILL BE KEPT CONFIDENTIAL: 

Name __________________________________Title, if any __________

Address _______________________________________________________

Phone/fax ________ # Shares owned  ________

Return to: UFCW 99R, 2501 W. Dunlap Ave., Phoenix AZ 85021

<PAGE>
PROXY 
SOLICITED BY UFCW 99R for
ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS of
PIER 1 IMPORTS
June 27, 1996

     The undersigned shareholder hereby appoints William
McDonough proxy with full power of substitution to vote all stock
held by the undersigned at the Pier 1 Imports annual shareholders
meeting, and at any adjournments thereof. The undersigned directs
this proxy be voted in accordance with the instructions below,
and grants no discretionary authority.

(1) PROPOSAL BY STOCKHOLDER BOYAR RECOMMENDING REPORT BY
INVESTMENT BANK ON HOW TO MAXIMIZE VALUE 

     FOR [   ]   AGAINST [   ]     ABSTAIN [   ]

(2) STOCKHOLDER PROPOSAL FOR CONFIDENTIAL SHAREHOLDER VOTING

     FOR [   ]   AGAINST [   ]     ABSTAIN [   ]

(3) ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     Nominees: C. Johnson, C. Scott, M. Girouard, S. McKenzie, J.
Hoak, M. Berman, C. Gordon 

     FOR all nominees: [  ]  WITHHOLD from all nominees [  ]

     FOR all nominees except: ____________________________

(4) Amendments to the 1989 Employee Stock Option Plan 

     FOR [   ]   AGAINST [   ]     ABSTAIN [   ]

SIGNATURE ________________________________   DATE ___________

PRINT NAME/TITLE__________________________
  
ADDRESS _____________________________________________________

_____________________    ___________      _______    _______
ACCOUNT NO.              # OF SHARES      PHONE No.   FAX No.

PLEASE DATE, SIGN AND PROMPTLY MAIL IN THE SELF-ADDRESSED
ENVELOPE. PERSONS SIGNING IN REPRESENTATIVE CAPACITY SHOULD
INDICATE AS SUCH. IF SHARES ARE HELD JOINTLY, BOTH OWNERS SHOULD
SIGN. IF YOU ARE NOT THE RECORD OWNER OF THIS STOCK, PLEASE LIST
THE RECORD OWNER'S NAME AND ADDRESS:















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