Or else you could send instead of a date, an long, like getTimeMillis(). 

I would do this way, if knowing there might be some interop problems... 
but... 

dovle

> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Ramaswamy, Muthu" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Wednesday, November 13, 2002 18:22
> Subject: RE: Date Serialization by Apache Client.
>
> > I am in PST Timezone. The ZONE_OFFSET: is -8:00 hours.
> >
> > So I would expect to see a Timestamp with Time Zone of "2002-11-11
>
> 00:00:00
>
> > -8:00" for the Date "2002-11-11" with 00:00:00 time component.
> >
> > Looks like it adds 8:00 hours to refer it to GMT time.
>
> java.util.Date has to TZ info, so expect confusion wherever it gets
> received; axis' assumptions may be different from others
>
> use the Calendar class, and explicitly set your TZ. It also gets marshalled
> as an xsd:date, but the TZ is correct.

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