Comments

wrote:
I think Mamils is right, those aren't switches on the top, they're drawbars which are typical of a Hammond.
wrote:
Wow, those lights are worth some serious money. It looks to be in working order, too.
wrote:
Looks like either Bogen or Argos speakers on the walls between the stage opening and the grate above the doors, they look to be boxes with 12 six or 8 inch speakers each in them. These are pretty typical for a sound system from that time period. Probably powered by a 15 to 35 watt 70-volt commercial amplifier. Not anything remotely like what would be used in a theater today.
wrote:
footprints...
wrote:
these pictures really made me thankful for all that i have...... really thought provoking... great stuff (although i may have nightmares lol)
wrote:
Those cabinets in the back look like they were emptied yesterday...
wrote:
That is so sad
wrote:
Since you couldn't wash their mouth out with soap, maybe when you opened up their brain . . . . . . . .

=8-o
wrote:
Why would a lobotomy room require that many soap dispensers??
wrote:
Tanya...overhead lights broken out (?)
wrote:
rusty,

I take it you used to work there or live there?
wrote:
Hey Motts, did you find any of the rooms with viewing windows?
wrote:
AAAAAARRRRRGGGGGGHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!

[THUMP]
[THUMP]
[THUMP]
wrote:
After the Pennhurst lawsuit, they kind of closed it down in a hurry, some of the photographs that I have seen have chalkboards with writing on them.
wrote:
motts at opacity.us

he's the photographer/
explorer/
brainchild behind all of this