On Veterans’ Day, Bonnie Boyce Evans accepted a Purple Heart on behalf of her late father, Newton Boyce, during a ceremony at the Veterans Memorial Park in Greene, N.Y. Nov. 11 would have been Boyce’s 94th birthday. Boyce was posthumously awarded the Purple Heart for wounds he received on Jan. 24, 1943, when his fighter crash-landed in Tunisia due to enemy fire and shrapnel from the aircraft’s fuselage became lodged in his hand. At the time, he was a first lieutenant flying with the 4th Fighter Squadron. Boyce was captured and spent the remainder of the war as a prisoner of war of Nazi Germany. Months later in captivity, a British doctor, a fellow POW, treated his hand and removed the shrapnel. After the war, Boyce attempted numerous times to receive the Purple Heart, but the authorities repeatedly told him that he had to prove that he required medical treatment for his wound. In September 1990, Boyce finally had the proof he needed, but he died a month later. Boyce’s nephew Wayne Brown provided the Daily Report with this information.
The Air Force displayed all the firepower it has amassed on Okinawa in an unusually diverse show of force this week. IIn a May 6 “Elephant Walk,” Kadena Air Base showcased 24 F-35A Lightning II stealth fighters, eight F-15E Strike Eagles; two U.S. Army Patriot anti-missile batteries near the runway; and…