Fox added the ears for mufflers in the early 80's, as stated. Before that the only provision for mufflers was a centered hole in the exhaust. Fox .35 stunt engines (.29's too) had no provisions for mufflers prior to the late 70's. I think this is about the time the AMA decreed mufflers be used. Mostly to save flying sites. 
I think the first Fox engines used "Acme" needles.
Austin-Craft, I think, and they were "universal" replacement needles that were already on the market.
The type with the little "+ sign" on the end were really a good idea, since it relieved the issue with cantilevering the needle on the threads, which were sloppy and wore to be even sloppier every quickly, particularly with the brass spraybars.
The needle with the flat was actually a much easier to produce version of the same idea - the round part fit right into the inlet side of the spraybar and also helped keep the needle centered. When it was set right, about 1/16"-1/8" of the taper end fit into spraybar on the inlet side and kept it from moving around. That made the very sloppy fits on the threads tolerable. That effect is lost with the "round" needle that really does just hang from the threads. The spraybars that came with those had a longer threaded section (although still not long enough) and were steel instead of brass, and fit much tighter in the threads, because they had to.
The muffler ears (vice the over/under holes) were added in the early-mid 70's, replacing the over/under hole mounting that broke off very easily and also distorted the case, particularly when it wore a bit and the screws started bottoming out. I think the over/under holes and the (optional) mufflers to use them were first offered in the late 60's. They were being advertised in model mags (full-page ads!) in the very early 70's. The muffler ears ALSO break off, not quite as easily, and ALSO distort the case. They didn't get that right until the 50th anniversary models when they made it look like the ST46 type, which is pretty bulletproof.
Mufflers are still not decreed by the AMA, even now. The "90 at 9" campaign started in the early 80's but the AMA never actually made a rule, it was just a strong recommendation (that many RC clubs made their own rules for). Of course noise is a complete red herring, note the story the other day about how someone called the cops on gliders!
Brett