This panel displays three of what turned out to be more than a dozen state, city, and national resolutions and proclamations heralding the history-making display of Una Storia Segreta in seven state houses and the Rayburn Office Building in Washington, DC during its long run.
One is a resolution by the California State Assembly commending the exhibit; the second is a similar resolution by the New Jersey Senate; the third is a resolution by Congressman Norman Mineta in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Not known at the time this panel was made was that the United States Congress would pass, and President Clinton would sign The Wartime Violation of Italian American Civil Liberties Act (Public Law #106-451) on November 7, 2000, thus correcting the persistent official denial that these violations had even taken place.