Volunteering a little soul
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Young Chang
Two years ago, one of the co-authors of the “Chicken Soup for the
Soul” series reached out to Margaret Buckingham and asked if she had
any nice volunteer stories to tell.
Buckingham had been the director of volunteers at the 1984
Olympics in Los Angeles. The Newport Beach resident admitted last
week, nothing really came to mind. She always assumed the “Chicken
Soup” books were “sort of schmaltzy,” as in heartwarming in a good
way.
Then she realized she was overlooking a volunteer quite close to
home, a volunteer who ended up helping to save the opening ceremony
of the Olympics at Los Angeles’ Memorial Coliseum that year.
So Buckingham, who is now the coordinator of volunteers at the
Environmental Nature Center, wrote about her dad.
Titled “Let the Games Begin!” the very short story in the recently
published “Chicken Soup for the Volunteer’s Soul” sheds light on a
non-incident that didn’t erupt into more because of her father, who
was an Olympics volunteer on the Opening Ceremony Committee for the
Torch and Ring.
Her story is one of 87 in the book, chosen from more than 5,000
submissions that “celebrate the spirit of courage, caring and
community.” The book landed in stores earlier this summer.
“I wasn’t surprised at all,” said Ed Buckingham, about learning he
was the star of his daughter’s work. “She’s always writing a story
about somebody.”
Weeks before the events began, a committee decided that the
Olympic torch spire and rings had to be redesigned to light up
properly. It was day 10 until the opening ceremony, and the committee
still didn’t have anyone tapped for the job.
Ed Buckingham was hired to do the job. He was a licensed engineer
and was experienced in flame-control and flame detection systems. He
said he was the technology manager at the Modern Pentathlon in Coto
de Caza at the time. For the Olympics, Buckingham designed a handful
of devices and some igniting options. Because he was already a
volunteer, he was easily cleared to begin his work, despite stringent
security measures surrounding the event.
Margaret Buckingham, as the director of volunteers, understood
just how many hoops her father was allowed to avoid in terms of
security clearance because of his volunteer status.
“They knew what his background was,” said the 53-year-old
Buckingham, who goes by Margie. “He’s very closed-mouthed about
anything that has an element of security.”
But on the morning of the Opening Ceremony, Ed Buckingham
discovered that all the wires for the torch had been removed.
Officials immediately suspected a bomb scare. The federal bomb squad
swarmed into the coliseum. Agents, including members of the Secret
Service, arrived and concluded that the area was bomb-free.
The ceremony began and Ed Buckingham, a very tall man, says his
daughter, remained hunched in the torch to make sure everything would
ignite.
“The tower is very small,” Margaret Buckingham said. “The visual
has a lot of humor in it too.”
Performers extended their shows and finally the torching-lighting
hour arrived. Ed Buckingham had fixed the problem by then and a ring
of flames and then the Olympic flame erupted.
Ed Buckingham said no-one officially knows what happened to the
original wires.
In a recent interview, his daughter said that everyone has a skill
or ability to contribute.
“And we should just take every opportunity we can,” said
Buckingham, who calls herself a perpetual volunteer and helps out
with groups including the National Charity League and the Newport
Beach Library Foundation. “We can make all the difference in some way
in the world. That’s [what it] was also with my dad. He was the right
person being in the right place at the right time. There virtually
wasn’t anyone that could do what he did.”
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