Igor Pak suggested I ask this as a separate question. In http://mathoverflow.net/questions/85547/extensions-of-the-koebeandreevthurston-theorem-to-sphere-packing it was asked whether there were simple conditions to decide whether a finite graph could be expressed by a bunch of spheres in $\mathbb R^3,$ two spheres touching if and only if the relevant vertices shared an edge. 

Steve Carnahan and I are of the opinion that any graph on $n$ vertices can be placed in $\mathbb R^{n-1}$ in the manner described. It is proved in Igor's book that the complete graph can be placed in $\mathbb R^{n-2}$ and no smaller dimension, one regular simplex with unit radii and then one extra sphere in the center. Of course, the complete graph can also be placed as a regular simplex with all unit spheres in $\mathbb R^{n-1}.$ But the varying radius question seems more fortunate, we get the same answer, if it works, in $\mathbb H^{n-1}$ and $\mathbb S^{n-1}.$

So, that is the initial question, can anyone prove that any graph on $n$ vertices, however many or few edges, can be placed in  $\mathbb R^{n-1}$ as a set of spheres, if we allow varying radius? 

Secondarily, and I have not the slightest idea,  is there any sort of expected dimension or "normal behavior" for this?