The article on Calico Wall is in Lost & Found magazine issue #2.
A quick summary:
The only member of Mike Waggoner & the Bops involved in the project was their drummer, Don Lentz
Other members of the group, including Lentz, were playing and recording as the Night Caps. Members were:
Pat Donahue, Gary Neilsen, and Don Dax.
They backed a local DJ, Lou Reigert on two songs released as a single on the Soma label. They also went to record at Chess studios but they never finished one song due to disagreements with the studio engineers. They went into Dove Recording studios in late 1965 to record four songs as a demo. This is how Dove recording engineer Peter Steinberg discovered the group, after hearing the demo.
He went to watch their show at a popular club called Herb's in the fall of 1966. Since the guys were also working at Dove when need as studio musicians, Steinberg hoped to put together his vision of a psychedelic masterpiece. He was not a musician, however, so the guys struggled to play what Steinberg "heard in his head". Steinberg wasn't satisfied with anybody singing the song "Flight Reaction" or "I'm A Living Sickness" so he ended up doing the vocal. He brought in some members of the Underbeats to sing the backing vocal on "Flight Reaction"; it took nearly one whole day for them to get it done to Steinberg's satisfaction. Once the 45 came out in March, 1967, Steinberg promised big things, but he ended up getting drafted, and that ended the Calico Wall project.