Proper noun
Kunkle (plural Kunkles)
A surname.
During the mid-1940s’ transition from props to jets, he piloted almost every other fighter and then, when he took his uniform off, Kunkle continued flying. Source: Internet
For heroism in his lone-wolf air battle, General Carl “Tooey” Spaatz, the U.S. air commander in Europe, decorated Kunkle with the Distinguished Service Cross in Paris, France, in February 1945. Source: Internet
Fredrick Kunkle is a staff writer on The Washington Post’s Metro desk and co-chair of the Washington-Baltimore News Guild’s bargaining unit at the Post. Source: Internet
One thing I found truly disconcerting about the merciless marital jibes from the media: The most frequent criticism of him on that score that I heard from my fellow reporters was that in his last and, I believe, final marriage, Kunkle married a reporter. Source: Internet
The aircraft were in a natural metal finish and most had nose art and names, although Kunkle never fulfilled his plan to name a P-38 “Kunk’s Clunk.” Source: Internet