UNDERSTANDING THE RIOTS / PART 3 : WITNESS TO RAGE : 'I didn't think they'd get me. I was unlucky.' Arnulfo Nunez Barrajas, \o7 32, served 4 days in Los Angeles County Jail for curfew violation after he traveled to Los Angeles from his Santa Ana home to comfort his grieving aunt, whose son had been killed during the riots. He is an unemployed laborer who was interviewed at a telephone a few doors away from the jail, trying to figure out how he would get home because he lacked the bus fare. \f7
UNDERSTANDING THE RIOTS / PART 3 : WITNESS TO RAGE : 'Suddenly, I was aware of being black.' Susan Anderson, \o7 38, is a public affairs director for Local Initiatives Support Corp., a Los Angeles-based national nonprofit organization that supports community development in low-income neighborhoods. She moved in 1975 from the San Francisco Bay area to West Los Angeles, where she lives with her filmmaker husband and their 14-year-old son. \f7
PLATFORM : Staying in L.A. \o7 CARL KARCHER, chairman and founder of Carl's Jr., started his fast-food chain in 1941 after he bought a hot-dog cart operating at the corner of Florence and Central in South Los Angeles. He commented on the need for businesses and corporations to resist leaving the area. He told The Times: and \f7