Earlier today I was reminded of your recent post on Feynman, Gell-Mann, quarks and partons, while talking with one of my advisors, Rich Brower, who happened to be a post-doc at Caltech in the early '70s and had some funny stories about the two of them.
I remember you writing something to the effect that Feynman called his theoretical point-like hadronic constituent particles "partons" instead of quarks just to piss off Gell-Mann, who had introduced quarks some years earlier. But Gell-Mann probably appreciated the different name (and may even have pushed for it), since he was convinced quarks were merely a convenient counting/classification trick, and did not exist as physical particles. Rich related an amusing saying of Gell-Mann's: "The parton model is just light-cone algebra plus mistakes" (i.e., the partons).