The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 30, 1985-- Page 5 Docious Godfrey, an RC junior, studies in front of Pursell's office to pass the time during the six-hour sit-in. Pursell protest arrests leads to Photos by Dan Habib Carey Garlick, an LSA senior, sits beside a Pittsfield police officer minutes before the arrests. (Left) Sgt. Anthony Latarski, right, and an unidentified Pittsfield Township police officer drag Gary Rothberger, an attorney, to the police van. (Above) Rothberger stands in the crammed police bus en route to the Pittsfield police station. More than 100 people last Monday stormed the Ann Arbor office of Republican Congressman Carl Pursell to voice their op- position to his support of U.S. military and economic assistance to Central America. The group - which included students, clergymen, attorneys, a professor - didn't find Pursell. He was in town, his aides said, but didn't want to meet with them. Undaunted, they sat down, refusing to move. From wall to wall, throughout the congressman's three offices, in the hall, and outside the building, the sea of protesters chanted, read poetry aloud, and many, having recently returned from Central America, shared-their experiences with the other protesters. In June, Pursell voted for a $27 million aid "The only difference between the wars we're fighting in Central America and Viet- nam is that our boys aren't coming home in boxes," said ' Jim Lewis, pastor of the Episcopal church of the Incarnation. Lewis was also arrested. Six hours later, at 4:55 p.m., police officers told the protesters they were trespassing and would be arrested unless they left the premises. In the twenty-five minutes that followed, all but 47 of the protesters left. Then the police returned, and handcuffed those remaining, along with a Daily photographer, and led the group away in paddy wagons. Many participated in the sit-in to draw the attention of the press, saying the general public is unaware of the situation in Central America "It's my experience that the information ,a I L<