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...eager to talk to the press. On the other hand, they're used to expressing themselves in buildings, so sometimes you need a translator." Luscombe comes equipped with two; her husband Jeremy Edmiston and her brother Guy are architects. "There's a lot of excitement among young architects about Rem Koolhaas," says Luscombe of her subject. "He always seems to be ahead of the curve. And, of course, he has the world's coolest name...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Contributors: Apr. 8, 1996 | 4/8/1996 | See Source »

ARCHITECTS GENERALLY ARE dour people. Since they're half professionals, half artists, neither side of them is ever entirely content. But Rem Koolhaas, the Dutch-born architect-prophet whom today's young architects most want to grow up to be, is smiling. He's thinking about the deep, vision-supporting pockets of his first American client, MCA-Universal, which has appointed him to oversee plans for most of a $3 billion expansion of Universal City in California. Why choose Koolhaas? "I think it's because of his grandfather," says Koolhaas of Edgar Bronfman Jr., grandson of the man who asked...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARCHITECTURE: REM KOOLHAAS: MAKING A SPLASH | 4/8/1996 | See Source »

Finally, scalp electrodes monitor brain activity through electroencephalograms (EEG's), which can track periods of REM and non-REM sleep...

Author: By Mary W. Lu, | Title: Harvard Lab Studies Daily Biorhythms | 11/29/1995 | See Source »

...ways: They can apply for a Nathariel Kleitman Fellowship, work as a work/study lab technician or volunteer as subjects in a study. The Kleitman Fellowship is a summer program founded by Megan E. Jewett '87, a resident tutor at Currier House, to honor the American researcher to first discover REM sleep...

Author: By Mary W. Lu, | Title: Harvard Lab Studies Daily Biorhythms | 11/29/1995 | See Source »

...peculiar scene is playing out in lawyers' offices around the country, reports Joseph Rem Jr., a defense attorney from Hackensack, New Jersey, who has been practicing criminal law for 20 years. These days the people who walk into his office expect an O.J. Simpson-style defense. "They want to contest all the scientific information against them," he says, and they talk about impaneling a mock jury, just as O.J. did. "They're now asking, 'What kind of jurors are you looking for?'" reports Rem, who has to break it to each new client, gently, that O.J. is different...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RICH JUSTICE, POOR JUSTICE | 6/19/1995 | See Source »

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