[8] He wrote a letter to Eisenhower in January 1960, advocating for a plan of reciprocal disarmament, where the United States would reduce its supply of weaponry by two percent and encourage other countries to do the same.
[12] In spring 1964, Laucks became a consultant for the Center and eventually moved to Santa Barbara to increase his involvement with its work.
[17] In 1953, Laucks published the book A Speculation in Reality, which addressed psychic phenomena using his background as a chemist and scientist.
[19] Laucks was an early investor in the Glendan Company in the 1970s, which attempted to build machines that could record psychic phenomena.
[20] He married Eulah Croson[21] She served as the director of Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions and was a regent of Immaculate Heart College.