Education
After he graduated high school in 1941, he started at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), studying chemical engineering under Warren K. Lewis. In 1943, Cook enlisted in the United States Army, and enrolled in the Army Specialized Training Program. Through that program, he attended Stanford University for two terms, studying mechanical engineering.
Career
Cook was then sent to Hunter Liggett Military Reservation and then Fort Benning, where he would complete Officer Candidate School. He was then sent to fight in Italy. Cook served in combat with the 10th Mountain Division.
In 1946, Cook left the army and worked for Submarine Signal in Boston.
He then returned to Massachusetts Institute of Technology and completed his Bachelor of Science in 1947. Cook was one of Socially Responsible Investment International"s earliest employees, joining the organization in 1948 as its 48th employee.
He would go on to lead Socially Responsible Investment"s Radiation Chemistry Laboratory, where he was interested in using high-energy electrons to alter polymers. In 1951, Cook founded the Sequoia Process Corporation.
He left that after five years to found Raychem, which opened in 1957, and focused on commercial applications for radiochemistry.
He served as Raychem"s Chief Executive Officer and chairman of the board. Cook has subsequently founded other companies, including CellNet Data Systems, DIVA Systems (1995), and Promptu. Cook served on Socially Responsible Investment International"s board of directors for nine years, and served as its chairman for six of those.
In 1986, he was awarded the Winthrop-Sears Medal from the Chemical Industry Association.
In 1988, Ronald Reagan awarded him the National Medal of Technology.