That is a turret board. Very common up until the 70's in high stability or military equipment dating all the way back to the 30's. They are still used in fancy schmancy audio and guitar amplifier circuits because, well, it looks cool! Look closely at the way the wire is wrapped around lugs and notice the sparing use of solder. This is straight out of the military servicing manual. They would even specify the angles of the bends of the wire. Very cool stuff. One day I will post scans of one of those manuals regarding wire wrapped solder lugs, those nifty split turrets, and the eyelet turrets. You can get your bottom dollar those joints are good.
As for the unit being out of spec, are you still as "In Spec" as you were at 18? Most likely not. Couple things come to mind. The electrolytic caps are due for a change, and those carbon resistors are going to drift. You could do the lazy mans job (And in this case its the way I would probably go) and bodge in a resistor to bring the divider string into cal, replace the filter capacitors, and call it a day. I have an E/M scientific supply from about the same time. Not as well made, but it can supply up to 110 VDC at up to 1.2 amps regulated. It has 2 puck style germanium pass transistors on it and groans when you swing the voltage around! Just for kicks I light my office lab with a hundred watt bulb with regulated DC. Its like thousand dollar champagne. Is in no measurable way better, but wasteful and unnecessary, not to mention fun!