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   He signed with his usual flourish.
    Winters' request for a court-martial, meanwhile, was posing a problem that was not as funny as it sounded for the 2nd Battalion staff. The officers got out the court-martial manual and studied it intensively to try to figure out some way to get out from under this embarrassment. They finally did, and Strayer set aside the punishment and declared the case closed鈥攏o court-martial.
    Sobel was not finished. The next day, November 12, Evans handed Winters another typed order:
    Subject: Failure to Instruct Latrine Orderly To: 1st Lt. R. D. Winters
    1. You will reply by indorsement hereon your reason for failure to instruct Pvt. J. Melo in his duties as latrine orderly.
    2. You will further reply why he was permitted to be on duty at 1030 Oct. 30 in need of a shave.
    "I give up," Winters decided. "Go ahead and shoot me." In that mood he replied, by endorsement:
    1. Reason for failure to instruct Pvt. J. Melo in his duties as latrine orderly: No excuse.
    2. Reason why he was permitted to be on duty at 1030 hr in need of a shave: No excuse.
    The next day Strayer decided, for the good of E Company (where, naturally, the long-anticipated showdown between Sobel and Winters was the talk of the barracks), to transfer Winters out of Easy. Strayer made him battalion mess officer.
    That was an insult to Winters, in his view: "You only give a job like that to a guy that can't do anything right."
    With Winters gone, Sobel still in charge, and combat coming, the N.C.O.s were in an uproar. Sergeants Ranney and Harris called a meeting. With the exception of Evans and one or two others, all the N.C.O.s in E Company attended. Ranney and Harris proposed that they present Colonel Sink with an ultimatum: either Sobel be replaced, or they would turn in their stripes. They stressed that they would have to act together, with no dissenters land no identifiable leader.
    This radical proposal elicited much comment, many questions, great concern, but in the end the group decision was that going into combat under Sobel's command was unthinkable. The only way they could let Strayer and Sink know how strongly they I felt was to turn in their stripes. Each noncom thereupon wrote out his own resignation: Lipton's went as follows: "I hereby turn in my stripes. I no longer want to be a non-commissioned officer in Company E." Lipton was C.Q. (charge of quarters, the sergeant who slept in the orderly room to be available to handle any problems that came up during the night, to wake the men in the morning, etc.) that night. He gathered up the resignations and put the stack in Sobel's "in" basket.
    The N.C.O.s then thought further about what they were doing and decided to consult with Winters. He was invited to the orderly room, where on arrival Ranney told him what the group had done.
    "Don't," said Winters. "Don't even think about it. This is mutiny."
    The N.C.O.s protested. As the discussion continued, Sobel walked in. Everyone was speechless. Sobel did not say a wo
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