N. Dakota school investigating fans in KKK-style hoods

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) - A North Dakota high school principal says appropriate action is being taken after three students briefly donned Ku Klux Klan-style white robes and hoods Friday night during a state hockey semifinal game.
The photo caused an uproar on Twitter when it was posted by 19-year-old Shane Schuster, who was seated with some friends at Ralph Engelstad Arena when something in the student section across the rink caught his eye.
"I thought, 'Are those KKK hoods?' I couldn't believe it," Schuster said. "I was shocked."
Schuster said he focused his camera phone and snapped a photo, later uploading it to Twitter.
Kristopher Arason, Red River's principal, said the school's investigation determined that the students put on the attire just after Red River's first goal and wore it for about 30 seconds to a minute. The teens removed the outfits after students in the section told them it was offensive, he said.
"We, as a school, are extremely disappointed with the behavior of these three students," Arason said in a statement sent to The Associated Press on Saturday. "This behavior is not a representation of our school or student body."
Arason said administrators were notified of the incident at the completion of the game. The students and their parents have been contacted and "appropriate action is being taken," he said.
Arason did not indicate what disciplinary action, if any, the three unidentified students could face.
Red River topped Fargo's Davies High School 2-0 to advance to Saturday night's North Dakota Boys State Hockey Tournament title game against Grafton-Park River.
Davies High School is named in honor of Ronald Davies, the former federal judge from Fargo whose 1957 rulings integrated Central High School in Little Rock, Ark. - a pivotal event in the civil rights movement.
The photo that Schuster posted on the social media site shows the three hooded fans in the middle of the Red River Roughriders section, in which everyone is dressed in white as part of a "whiteout." The post had been retweeted 75 times by late Saturday afternoon, with many users expressing their outrage.
The hockey tradition of encouraging fans to all wear all white was started more than 25 years ago by the original Winnipeg Jets - which currently are the Phoenix Coyotes. In 1987, Jets fans donning white shirts and jerseys packed Winnipeg Arena to watch the team take on the Calgary Flames in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs.
The practice has since spread to the college and high school levels.
Arason said Red River has a tradition of wearing a different color for each of the three days of the state tournament in accordance with the team's colors. Roughrider fans wore black for the first day, white for the second and red for the final day.
The photo caused an uproar on Twitter when it was posted by 19-year-old Shane Schuster, who was seated with some friends at Ralph Engelstad Arena when something in the student section across the rink caught his eye.
"I thought, 'Are those KKK hoods?' I couldn't believe it," Schuster said. "I was shocked."
Schuster said he focused his camera phone and snapped a photo, later uploading it to Twitter.
Kristopher Arason, Red River's principal, said the school's investigation determined that the students put on the attire just after Red River's first goal and wore it for about 30 seconds to a minute. The teens removed the outfits after students in the section told them it was offensive, he said.
"We, as a school, are extremely disappointed with the behavior of these three students," Arason said in a statement sent to The Associated Press on Saturday. "This behavior is not a representation of our school or student body."
Arason said administrators were notified of the incident at the completion of the game. The students and their parents have been contacted and "appropriate action is being taken," he said.
Arason did not indicate what disciplinary action, if any, the three unidentified students could face.
Red River topped Fargo's Davies High School 2-0 to advance to Saturday night's North Dakota Boys State Hockey Tournament title game against Grafton-Park River.
Davies High School is named in honor of Ronald Davies, the former federal judge from Fargo whose 1957 rulings integrated Central High School in Little Rock, Ark. - a pivotal event in the civil rights movement.
The photo that Schuster posted on the social media site shows the three hooded fans in the middle of the Red River Roughriders section, in which everyone is dressed in white as part of a "whiteout." The post had been retweeted 75 times by late Saturday afternoon, with many users expressing their outrage.
The hockey tradition of encouraging fans to all wear all white was started more than 25 years ago by the original Winnipeg Jets - which currently are the Phoenix Coyotes. In 1987, Jets fans donning white shirts and jerseys packed Winnipeg Arena to watch the team take on the Calgary Flames in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs.
The practice has since spread to the college and high school levels.
Arason said Red River has a tradition of wearing a different color for each of the three days of the state tournament in accordance with the team's colors. Roughrider fans wore black for the first day, white for the second and red for the final day.
Thought crime police to the rescue!
Is what these 3 did insensitive? Yes.Â
Inconsiderate of history? Yes.Â
Was it criminal? No.Â
It's not as if these idiots gang lynched someone, or raised a swasticka flag. They didn't utter racial slurs or beat up someone. They put on hoods for :30 at a basketball game when their team scored. That's it. No earth shattering event occurred. I can agree that the principal might want to pull them aside and let them know that what they did could have been considered to be in poor taste, perhaps even assign them a paper on the history of the KKK uniform. But for something that happened in a high school auditorium in N Dakota to become a national 'news' story? Really????
I'm always a bit aghast when someones interpretation of someone elses constitutionally protected freedom of expression is given to the social programmers because it offends someone. These three knuckleheads put on white hoods for (by the authors estimate) less than a minute in a basketball game attended by (presumption) a couple of hundred people. Suddenly, because someone got offended, it's a 'national issue'?
God bless the media... keeping folks generic and sanitized for the protection of all!
Well, they were told to wear white. What did they all expect, the band to look like a Mummer's Parade?
The Hanson Brothers
A duck and 3 quacks !
Yep, a UO Duck fan center left, how stupid. Â He should be arrested, the Duck dynasty (nasty) is over.
@RandyHÂ I doubt in football
The hoody is evolving
I wonder if they have any idea how stupid they look in those hoods...
Since no school teaches history anymore, these folks probably had no idea their hoods were considered "verboten" nowadays! LOL
@jpk And the KKK stole it from the flagellants of Spain, which hoods were called a "capirote". Either way, they are "whipper snappers" of their own right.
Seriously? A duck fan in SD? Dear god their multiplying......
What the heck? We don't need this crap now or ever.
that offends me and i'm a bigoted hick
Who cares..........
I like the U of O shirt next to the original boys in the hood
I thought they were trying to be ghosts.
@TreeWizard ---I ain't afraid of no ghosts!
"Hey, where the women women at?!!"
@badcat ~ There's women there, badcat... they're in the front (lowest) couple of rows...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=493pL_Vbtnc
@badcat ~ Ahh... got it..!  Been so long since I saw the flick I just never matched it to your comment..!  :-)