This is a contradiction in terms, since "a plank with an angle of attack of about 55" is no other thing than an airfoil, however inefficient.
Dr. Lew, not to quibble, but an “airfoil” is presumed to have one of a number of quintessentially teardrop, although not necessarily symmetrical, shape. A catalog (obviously incomplete) of such shapes was once published as “Theory of Wing Sections - Including a Summary of Airfoil Data”. (Dover, 1949)
Nowhere in this volume is a rectangular or “plank” section described or presented as an airfoil, nor was data thought to be important enough to publish.
You may be alone as describing a “plank” section as an airfoil and I may be alone (although I suspect that I am not) in proving that it can function as one.