' + activeFrame.title + ' '); $(".fotorama-caption").addClass("add_caption"); $(".fotorama-caption").removeClass("remove_caption"); } else { // alert("hide div"); $(".fotorama-caption").addClass("remove_caption"); $(".fotorama-caption").removeClass("add_caption"); } }) .fotorama(); Chicago suburb set to pay 'reparations' but not all on board Friday, May 07, 2021 CHICAGO, United States (AP) — When Teri Murray tried to buy her first home in 1968, searching this leafy college town for the perfect place, she thought she was an ideal candidate: married, steadily employed, ample savings. But banks rejected her, giving dubious excuses that they had stopped offering loans or the application period had closed. At 76, Murray now realises those experiences were common for black residents like her who faced decades of racist housing practices designed to stymie homeownership or force them to live in certain areas.