Talk:Wiki Rules/@comment-216.49.152.68-20150424174300/@comment-26130256-20150424182814

No sweat, Anon. There appear to be a handful of cases where someone (always an adult) gets away with a color for their last name, like James Ironwood and Lisa Lavender.

For Doc. Oobleck, his name comes from the Dr. Seuss book Bartholomew and the Oobleck, where Oobleck is this wierd-green looking stuff. Also, Bartholomew can either mean "Son of Tolmai" or "Son of Furrows (dirt->earth->brown)"

For Prof. Port, the name Peter comes from the Greek petros, meaning "a stone" (brown or gray). And his last name refers to a type of wine from Portugal. You don't need to have both a first and last name be a color, but it's cool if you can pull it off. Hope this helps!

Note:  This is according to my understanding. Someone correct me if I'm wrong.