Richard Truscoe was appointed from University College London in 1957 to establish teaching and research in Biochemistry at Victoria University of Wellington. He had extensive experience in research in England, Europe, and the United States. His scientific career had been interrupted by the Second World War, in which he served as an intelligence officer in the top-secret British Special Operations Executive (SOE). His SOE service was regarded as remarkable. During the war he consistently supported an independent future for Poland and warned of the dangers presented by the territorial ambitions of the Soviet Union. In biochemistry he had been a pioneer researcher on the metabolism of purines, and on the metabolic functions and effects of horm...