Author: niallp Date: Thu Oct 19 21:03:21 2006 New Revision: 465974 URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc?view=rev&rev=465974 Log: Announcement for David DeWolf and correct anchor
Modified: struts/site/src/site/xdoc/announce.xml struts/site/src/site/xdoc/volunteers.xml Modified: struts/site/src/site/xdoc/announce.xml URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/struts/site/src/site/xdoc/announce.xml?view=diff&rev=465974&r1=465973&r2=465974 ============================================================================== --- struts/site/src/site/xdoc/announce.xml (original) +++ struts/site/src/site/xdoc/announce.xml Thu Oct 19 21:03:21 2006 @@ -30,6 +30,26 @@ Skip to: <a href="announce-2005.html">Announcements - 2005</a> </p> + <h4 id="a20061020.1">20 Oct 2006 - New Struts Committer: David DeWolf</h4> + <p> + Please join us in welcoming David DeWolf as a new Struts committer. + </p> + <p> + David is a FTP Server and Portals committer, and has been submitting + high quality Struts and Tiles patches since April. As a member of the + JSR-286 Expert Group and + <a href="http://portals.apache.org/pluto">Apache Pluto</a> project + David brings invaluable Portals experience to the Struts team. + </p> + <p> + Welcome, David ... and in Don's words <i>"now you can commit your + own dam patches!"</i> + </p> + <p> + PMC vote: 9 +1. + </p> + <hr/> + <h4 id="a20061010">10 Oct 2006 - Struts v2.0.1 Development Build</h4> <p> Modified: struts/site/src/site/xdoc/volunteers.xml URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/struts/site/src/site/xdoc/volunteers.xml?view=diff&rev=465974&r1=465973&r2=465974 ============================================================================== --- struts/site/src/site/xdoc/volunteers.xml (original) +++ struts/site/src/site/xdoc/volunteers.xml Thu Oct 19 21:03:21 2006 @@ -1377,7 +1377,7 @@ <p>I hope that Tiles will become a great software and I will do my best.</p> - <h4 id="apetrelli">David H. DeWolf -- Committer</h4> + <h4 id="ddewolf">David H. DeWolf -- Committer</h4> <p>When I graduated from school in 1999 I headed to Flower Mound, Texas (a Dallas Suberb) where my wife Teresa had grown up. I was fortunate to find my first web development contract