<h2 class="ltx_title_subsection"></h2><h2 data-label="483503" class="ltx_title_subsection">3. Nobel Prize in Physics (1969) awarded to Murray Gell-Mann for: "for his contributions and discoveries concerning the classification of elementary particles and their interactions"</h2><div></div><blockquote><div><a href="https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/jpa-00222385/document">Rejection:</a>&nbsp;That was not my title, which was : Isotopic Spin and Curious Particles. Physical Review rejected "Curious Particles". I tried "Strange Particles", and they rejected that too. They insisted on : "New Unstable Particles". That was the only phrase sufficiently pompous for the editors of the Physical Review. I should say now that I have always hated the Physical Review Letters and almost twenty years ago I decided never again to publish in that journal, but in 1953 I was scarcely in a position to shop around.</div></blockquote><div></div>