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I coined my own definition of success in 1934, when I was teaching at a high school in South Bend, Indiana, being a little bit disappointed, and [disillusioned] perhaps, by the way parents of the youngsters in my English classes expected their youngsters to get an A or a B. They thought a C was all right for the neighbors children, because they were all average. But they werent satisfied when their own -- it would make the teacher feel that they had failed, or the youngster had failed. And thats not right. The good Lord in his infinite wisdom didnt create us all equal as far as intelligence is concerned, any more than were equal for size, appearance. Not everybody could earn an A or a B, and I didnt like that way of judging, and I did know how the alumni of various schools back in the 30s judged coaches and athletic teams. If you won them all, you were considered to be reasonably successful -- not completely. Because I found out -- we had a number of years at UCLA where we didn