In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Decide if you’d like a DJ or band and then contact different vendors in your area. Make sure you let them know the date of your wedding and that they understand how soon it is.If you can’t find anyone, try asking your friends and family members if they know anyone who is available to play on the date of your wedding. Find some local wedding photographers in your area and see if they are available on your wedding date. Sign a contract stating how many photos you want and how much you will be paying for their services. You can also hire the same photographer to take engagement photos of you and your partner if you’d like to. Since planning a wedding on such short notice can be expensive, it’s okay to take some time in between your wedding and your honeymoon. If you do have money set aside, make sure to book your flights and hotel rooms for your honeymoon a few months in advance.  If you will be traveling out of the country, apply for your passport at least 4 months ahead of time if you don’t have one. Consider taking your honeymoon somewhere closer to home to cut costs and planning time, like at a local beach or at a ski lodge near you.
Summary: Hire a band or DJ to play at your reception. Contact a photographer to take photos at your wedding. Plan a honeymoon if your budget allows it.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Your first line of defense against troublesome body odor is a keen sense of smell. Take a whiff of potential problem areas, including your underarms, feet and genitals. While your own body odor is typically tough to distinguish, you may be able to pick up on it if it’s strong enough.  See if you can detect any salty, musty or pungent notes. The best time to do this is after the effects of bathing have worn off, since this is when odors will be most pronounced. Breathe out sharply through your mouth and into your cupped palm so that the gust is redirected to your nose. Smell your breath as it bounces back toward you. This can usually help clue you in as to whether your oral hygiene might be a source of unwanted body odor.  Perform routine breath checks between meals so that you can rule out a particular type of food as the cause.  Keep a pack of sugar-free chewing gum or mints handy to freshen bad breath. At the end of the day, dig through your discarded garments and put them through a smell test. As your body secretes sweat, dirt and natural oils, they can become absorbed into clothing fibers, causing them to stink. In this way, your clothing may be responsible for trapping body odor and making it worse.  Focus your attention on the underarms of your shirts and the crotch region of pants and underwear. Make sure the articles of clothing you check are work or casual items. Workout apparel is much more likely to smell already because of how much you sweat in it. The bulk of body odor is caused by perspiration, and the way your sweat smells can tell you a lot about what’s going on in your body. It’s not uncommon for body odor to seem worse in the summer months or after strenuous exercise. If you find that your sweat smells unusually strange or intense, however, it could be the result of some lifestyle change you’ve recently made.  You can get a better sense of how your perspiration smells by sniffing yourself in a place with poor ventilation, such as a closed shower stall or inside the neck of your shirt. New medications, natural hormonal changes, chronic stress and conditions like diabetes are all potential causes of stubborn body odor.
Summary: Smell yourself. Check your breath. Give your clothes a sniff. Assess your sweat.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Look for something that looks like a tiny onion at the base of a green stem (which fades from lime to emerald green upward from the bulb). The stems are usually thicker and sturdier than green onions to support the bulbs.  Spring onions are a more mature version of green onions, hence they have a larger bulb. Most markets and grocers sell spring onions with the bulbs attached and the tops of the stems trimmed down to about 4 inches (10 cm) to 6 inches (15 cm) long. They’ll often be sold in a batch of 5 or 6 bulbs with the tops attached. True to their name, spring onions are harvested in the spring, so depending on where you live, you’re more likely to see them at farmer’s markets around those times. If you notice there are small bulbs that look similar to garlic at the base, those are shallots. They grow in tight clusters and typically look a little like small brown onions, only more elongated. You’ll be able to spot them because they aren’t sold with the greens on top.  Shallots come in purple, brown, and gray varieties (the gray ones are especially rare and considered to be a French delicacy). Shallots are harvested in summer and fall, so that’s usually the best time to eat them. You can also give them a sniff—they have a zingy, sulfuric smell.
Summary:
Identify spring onions by their long green stems and white bulbs. Notice the bunched, garlic-like clusters that are a hallmark of shallots.