I found this as well:
http://rorate-caeli.blogspot.com/2015/03/the-50th-anniversary-of-paul-vis-first.html
Intentionally celebrating the Mass facing the people, displacing the altar from the sanctuary (and in fact doing away with a tangible sanctuary in the traditional sense), covering up or removing the high altar, the use of a table-altar, communion no longer received while kneeling ... we are often assured by conservative writers that these had nothing to do either with Paul VI or Vatican II, and in fact became widespread only years later, and against the express will of both. However, the records of this Mass and of Masses publicly celebrated by Paul VI in the years immediately after 1965 show that he was at the vanguard of these changes.
This is ironic given the tendency in some Reform of the Reform circles to point to the 1965 Missal as the way to resacralization and the return to tradition for the wider Church a Missal whose very birth was attended by many of the innovations now deplored by these same circles.
Equally of note is that these innovations, which many in the Reform of the Reform camp assert have nothing to do with Vatican II because these are not mentioned in the actual text of Sacrosanctum Concilium, were already taking place in Rome itself, with the Popes own endorsement and in his presence, long before the Council ended on December 8, 1965.