Ported or manifold Vacuum to Dist.

I guess a GM engineer believed differently:

"..After 30-40 years of controlling vacuum advance with full manifold vacuum, along came emissions requirements, years before catalytic converter technology had been developed, and all manner of crude band-aid systems were developed to try and reduce hydrocarbons and oxides of nitrogen in the exhaust stream. One of these band-aids was "ported spark", which moved the vacuum pickup orifice in the carburetor venturi from below the throttle plate (where it was exposed to full manifold vacuum at idle) to above the throttle plate, where it saw no manifold vacuum at all at idle. This meant the vacuum advance was inoperative at idle (retarding spark timing from its optimum value), and these applications also had VERY low initial static timing (usually 4 degrees or less, and some actually were set at 2 degrees AFTER TDC). This was done in order to increase exhaust gas temperature (due to "lighting the fire late") to improve the effectiveness of the "afterburning" of hydrocarbons by the air injected into the exhaust manifolds by the A.I.R. system; as a result, these engines ran like crap, and an enormous amount of wasted heat energy was transferred through the exhaust port walls into the coolant, causing them to run hot at idle - cylinder pressure fell off, engine temperatures went up, combustion efficiency went down the drain, and fuel economy went down with it..."

Now, what Mopar did with this prior to air injection (they were late to that party) is another fork of reasoning.
And whoever he is, he's absolutely wrong.
That became pretty obvious when looking at what was actually done. Go ahead - I'm sure you have some 60s service manuals and so forth. We can believe some guy who may or may not have have been involved in ignition system development or we can believe what we read in original documents and see on original vehicles. You already know my conclusion on that.
There were other methods used. I think was Ford who tried a venturi vacuum based advance mechanism (40s?) and that's not the only one.