Football Game Sign Ignites Racial Tension, Police Hunt For Apple’s Missing iPhone 5 Prototype, and a One Ton Crocodile Captured

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A sign at an Ohio high school football game has some outraged over what they say is racism but others are saying the sign refers to Internet slang. After Kirtland High School beat rival Painesville Harvey, Kirtland fans unveiled a large sign that read, "You Mad, Bro?" The president of the Lake County, Ohio, chapter of the NAACP called the sign "racial intimidation." The Painesville, Ohio, superintendent agreed. He said, "The sign definitely has a racial connection to it." However, the term is also a common saying on the Internet. If someone gets angry online in a forum or comments section, "u mad bro?" is often used as another way to say the person got the best of them. Whether the sign was in fact racist or just Internet slang, the principal of Kirtland High said there will be a thorough investigation. What's your take on the sign? Tell us on Facebook and Twitter.

The saga of Apple's lost iPhone 5 prototype continues. The technology site CNET.com reported that an unreleased iPhone 5 prototype (likely veiled in an iPhone 4 case) was left at a San Francisco tequila bar in July. Apple investigators then contacted San Francisco police, telling them the device was priceless and that they were desperate to have it back. Using GPS, Apple tracked the device to a San Francisco home. Police and Apple investigators went there and spoke to a 22-year-old Sergio Calderón. Calderón told the San Francisco Weekly that the group of four men and two women said they were part of the San Francisco Police Department, even though it was revealed later that some members of the group were Apple employees. In the state of California, pretending to be a police officer is a crime punishable by up to a year in prison. Calderón told the investigators that he had in fact been at the same tequila bar where the phone was lost but had no knowledge of a lost phone. Calderón let the group search his home, car, and computer, but it came up empty-handed. The investigators told Calderón that the phone's owner did not want to press charges and would pay $300 to have the phone back. Calderón said one of the officers even threatened his family's immigration status, even though they are all U.S. citizens. "One of the officers is like, 'Is everyone in this house an American citizen?' They said we were all going to get into trouble," Calderón told the San Francisco Weekly. If you're wondering why you might be feeling déjà vu, it's because last year an Apple employee lost an iPhone 4 prototype at another San Francisco bar. The men who found it sold it to the technology site Gizmodo for $5,000, leaking the phone's secret features to the press and creating a PR disaster for Apple.

Lastly, a photo going viral across the Web shows a one-ton crocodile that was captured in the Philippines. The croc was hunted down after locals suspected it of killing a local fisherman. After destroying four traps in three weeks, the 2,300-pound reptile was finally captured. It took about 100 villagers to help drag the heavy creature onshore. It's now slated to be the newest star at an ecotourism park the local town plans to build. On Twitter, one person called the beast their "worst nightmare" and another wrote, "Cue the Jurassic Park theme music! RT @CNN: 21-foot monster crocodile caught."