Rivalry Put Aside for Halftime Show
By: Amber Meredith
The state of Alabama has a love for football that runs deep in the heart of every citizen, and a
rivalry that runs even deeper.
The Iron Bowl is a day anticipated with both excitement and dread,
for it...
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Rivalry Put Aside for Halftime Show
By: Amber Meredith
The state of Alabama has a love for football that runs deep in the heart of every citizen, and a
rivalry that runs even deeper.
The Iron Bowl is a day anticipated with both excitement and dread,
for it is the one day that determines who owns the bragging rights for the next year.
This rivalry
can turn not only friends into sworn enemies, but even families against each other.
On November 26, the day of the year when the rivalry between Auburn University and the
University of Alabama was the strongest, the crowd at Jordan-Hare Stadium had a chance to forget
about their hatred for the other team for a few minutes when the marching bands of each university
joined forces to perform a halftime show together.
Confusion swept across the faces of fans as both bands took the field together in alternating rows
of orange and navy, crimson and white.
According to the announcer, the Auburn University Marching Band and the University of
Alab
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