Cover of the Day: X-Men #109 (February, 1978) Art by Dave Cockrum, Terry Austin, Irving Watanabe

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Cover of the Day: X-Men #109 (February, 1978) Art by Dave Cockrum, Terry Austin, Irving Watanabe
Alpha Flight #17
365 Marvel Comics Paper Cut-Out SuperHeroes - One Hero, Every Day, All Year…
July 1st - Guardian
James MacDonald had been an engineer working for the Am-Can Petro-Chemical Company. Hudson designed an ingenious armored suit for the purposes of geological exploration. When he found out his superior, Jerry Jaxon, wanted to sell the design to the military, Hudson stole the suit and its designs and sabotaged Am-Can’s capability for mass producing the suit as a weapon.
Following a prolonged legal battle with Am-Can, Hudson was awarded full rights to his design. Soon thereafter, Hudson was recruited by the Canadian Governmental program, Department H. This Department H sought to create a team of super heroes to defend Canada in the same manner that The Avengers and Fantastic Four so often protected the United States. Hudson agreed and updated his suit to become a superhero originally dubbed ‘Weapon Alpha.’ These updates enabled Hudson greatly enhanced strength and durability as well as the capacity for high-speed fight and the emission of concussive electromagnetic energy beams. Hudson also had the exterior of his suit detailed with the emblem of the Canadian Flag.
As Weapon Alpha, Hudson led ‘Alpha Flight,’ Department H’s premier team of heroes. An early mission entailed tracking down the alleged deserter, Wolverine. Hudson was unaware of the terrible treatment Wolverine had endured as an unwitting test subject in Department H’s efforts to create a super soldier. Following a battle with the X-Men, Hudson learned the truth and he chose to leave Wolverine in peace.
Upset over the ways in which he had allowed Department H to use him, Hudson renamed himself ‘The Vindicator’ and led an effort to create a better Alpha Flight. He was additionally involved in the recruitment of new prospects and managing the developmental squads of Beta and Gamma Flight. Hudson was aided in these endeavors by his wife, the brilliant scientist, Heather McNeil Hudson.
Feeling as though he had redeemed himself, Hudson changed his super hero name once more, this time to The Guardian, and continued to lead Alpha Flight on numerous missions. He was killed in action but later returned having been transformed into a cyborg wherein he and his armor were made one and the same. Following an adventure that saw Alpha Flight battling the alien Plodex, Hudson was transformed back into his original, fully human self.
The hero first appeared in the pages of X-Men Vol. 1 # 109 (1977).
X-Men Unabridged: 109 (1978)
The X-Men, those plant-loving mutants that have sworn to protect a world that hates and fears them, are a cultural juggernaut with a long, tangled history. We’ve been untangling that history for a while, but sometimes, you really want a more in-depth look. Interested? Then read the (un)Abridged X-Men!
(X-Men 109) - by Chris Claremont and John Byrne
Ororo not noticing Moira casually drowning Banshee or Wolverine being punted around by some poutine-roided idiot because she’s too busy eating the Piotr-shaped eye candy is such a mood.
I wonder what my ethnic curse would be. Perhaps: ‘By Mata Hari’s bedazled bikini!’
Uncanny X-Men 109 pg22-23 by John Byrne
1st Appearance of Guardian
Character Spotlight | Guardian | Part 1
Alpha Flight’s Guardian vs. Wolverine by Kieron Dwyer with inks by Terry Austin from the frontispiece of Classic X-Men #27 (1988)