It was three months before Labor Day in the 1982, and not a few people around Plaisance had decided that Wilbert Guillory and the folks at the Southern Development Foundation had lost their minds. They watched as a team of workers attached a bush hog to the back of a tractor and cleared about five acres in the middle of a soybean field. Grass was raked and hauled away. Wooden pallets were stacked together, and a large piece of plywood was nailed on top. A microphone was placed on this stage, ...