This Week's
Upper Lip Item
belongs to...
TV Newscaster, Media Personality, and peerless Investigative Journalist...
...Don Lemon!
This 'Most Mysterious'
part of the face
is
'Nature's Mark Of The Blessed,'
and
the 'God's Sign on his First Powerful Ancient Warriors'
(Originating from the newly-proposed Ancient East African Humanoid Species
approx. 300,000 years ago).
"The Winge's Peak, when visibly present and in motion, is one of the
most attention-attracting, flexible, emotional, and beautiful parts of the face! And it
is also a confirmatory sign that a person has the 'Super-Humanity-Power Genetics
Trait' among their chromosomes,"
Elatus labialis wingeulus, a genetically-dominant physical trait, is an 'appendage'
over and of the upper lip's middle tubercle frontal surface, and is a naturally-
occurring, variably-manifested, vertically-oriented, differentiated soft tissue,
epithelial-emanating fold or ridge or line or prominence, or otherwise, with
subepithelial components (Winge's Peak Connective Tissue Complex, which
includes the Hybrid Jaimalah Fibers), which coincides with the midline of
the face and the interincisal and mid-sagittal lines, and runs down the middle
of the middle tubercle surface of the rostral upper lip, which may extend
inferiorly from the middle of the Vermillion Border's Cupid's Bow,
down to the lower edge of the lip, with or without significant elevation
above the surrounding lateral labial tissues, with or without the presence of
differentiated vermillion surface epithelium (Winge Epithelium) seen along
the linear crest of the Peak, and with or without the presence of an
inferiorly-positioned procheilon.
"The Winge's Peak, when visibly present and in motion, is one of the
most attention-attracting, flexible, emotional, and beautiful parts of the face! And it
is also a confirmatory sign that a person has the 'Super-Humanity-Power Genetics Trait'
among their chromosomes,"
"All humans that have evidence of an elatus labialis wingeulus

on their upper lips

are
considered to be
direct descendants of the prehistoric humanoid species
homo 
wingeulus."
Ralph Winge, D.D.S., USC Dental School Graduate,
and elucidator of

elatus labialis wingeulus.
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