Mark Rand
Oct 28th, '06, 01:33 PM
I've decided that my four-color Coastal City superhero campaign has several federal liaisons assigned to the team. Only one, from the Commission on Superhuman Affairs, DOSPA in the CU, is the official federal liaison. The others, from SHIELD, PRIMUS in the CU, and the Department of Homeland Security, are agency representatives.
Roger Clark is the liaison from the Commission on Superhuman Affairs. He's an easygoing bureaucrat and a klutz. Additionally, he can't program a VCR, a digital clock, or a digital watch and cell phones, personal computers, CD and DVD players, and cable TV equipment give him problems.
Denise Dumont represents SHIELD. A young African-American woman with braided, black hair, she was an acting major in college. In her first play of her final year, she had to portray a fashionably-dressed woman in 1902 Boston. Since women of that era always wore gloves, she had to learn how to do everything in them.
After college, Denise was recruited by the CIA. Once she completed basic training, Denise received additional training in seduction techniques and B&E. She worked mainly and Europe and was nicknamed The Black Cat by a Paris newspaper. Problems with a rival agency, and the pompus senator it had contacts with, forced her to leave the CIA for SHIELD.
John Masters represents the Department of Homeland Security. A middle-aged African-American man, he played baseball and football in high school and college, was on his high school debate team, and in the NROTC in college. A legal genius and former Department of Justice lawyer, he is still a reserve member of JAG.
Comments, questions, ideas?
Roger Clark is the liaison from the Commission on Superhuman Affairs. He's an easygoing bureaucrat and a klutz. Additionally, he can't program a VCR, a digital clock, or a digital watch and cell phones, personal computers, CD and DVD players, and cable TV equipment give him problems.
Denise Dumont represents SHIELD. A young African-American woman with braided, black hair, she was an acting major in college. In her first play of her final year, she had to portray a fashionably-dressed woman in 1902 Boston. Since women of that era always wore gloves, she had to learn how to do everything in them.
After college, Denise was recruited by the CIA. Once she completed basic training, Denise received additional training in seduction techniques and B&E. She worked mainly and Europe and was nicknamed The Black Cat by a Paris newspaper. Problems with a rival agency, and the pompus senator it had contacts with, forced her to leave the CIA for SHIELD.
John Masters represents the Department of Homeland Security. A middle-aged African-American man, he played baseball and football in high school and college, was on his high school debate team, and in the NROTC in college. A legal genius and former Department of Justice lawyer, he is still a reserve member of JAG.
Comments, questions, ideas?