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"I try to be healthy for the whole week, but there's nothing wrong to treating myself to a nice juicy burger," Comerford says of her own diet. The Let's Move campaign -- which has pushed for better school lunches, more access to healthy foods and more physical activity
-- will celebrate its second anniversary this month, and the first lady is on a two-day swing through California to promote her initiative as well as help Democrats raise money for the upcoming elections. On Tuesday, Mrs. Obama visited NBC's "Tonight Show." She cajoled Jay Leno into breaking his long-held aversion for all-things-healthy in his diet, feeding the host apples, sweet potato fries and a pizza made with eggplant, green peppers and zucchini. Prevention Magazine is featuring Mrs. Obama on its March cover. In an interview with the magazine, the first lady says her daughter Sasha recently discovered tomatoes
-- a food she always said she didn't like -- after taking a cooking class at school. But that doesn't mean she'll be taking advantage of the plump red ones grown in her own backyard, the first lady said. "She insisted that the tomatoes she had at school were different from the ones we have at home," Mrs. Obama told the magazine. "But the real difference is that she had put time into making that sandwich, so she was invested in it." ___ Online: Prevention Magazine's "Kids Get Cooking" project: Let's Move campaign: http://www.letsmove.gov/
http://www.prevention.com/cook-with-kids
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