Don’t forget Artie, the Strongest Man in the World.
Dang beat me to it 

Harry Potter. (stretching superhero a bit, I know.)
This was explained in the comic book long ago… The lenses were prescription, but in the normal way. His eyesight as far a acuity was fine, but normal light had started to bother him - it actually got painful - and they experimented until they found lenses that were “soothing”, which just happened to be the same stuff that could control his “optic blasts”. When they first appeared they knocked the glasses off - the pair he wears in “civvie” dress are much more robust.
The Eradicator (when temporarily believing he was Superman) wore a visor because strong light hurt his eyes.
Ah, OK.
And I beat him, but who keeps track of such things?
I do!
OK, that’s two points for Otto. Hmm, you’re closing in on 8th place!
–Cliffy
Heather Hudson, nee McNeil Heather McNeil (Earth-616) | Marvel Database | Fandom I believe.
You’ve answered a question asked eight years ago. It was also answered the same day it was asked (post #13).
I don’t even remember starting this thread.
But since I couldn’t bring myself to start a new thread with my new question, I’ll put it here.
How many people are killed each year by a contract killer dropping a piano or an anvil on them?
Hm. Do you add or multiply the two Cecil columns to get the answer?
If you count the Doctor as a superhero (and I would, I think) he frequently would put on a pair in his 10th incarnation.
It would be one of those diagrams with the overlapping circles.
One represents the people killed by contract killers. One represents those killed by falling pianos and anvils. Where they overlap is the people killed by both.
That would be a Venn diagram: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venn_diagram.
What about Common Multiple Man?
One example that was missed the first time around: Plasticman.