SUN, DA.Y78 rvEW YORK'S PICTURE NEWSPAPER $, TWPILD S PERIL. MR PE E O 0 0 .0 Front page of the New York Daily News on July 30, 1966 shows the dramatic rescue of Estelle Donna Evans who leaped from the Queensboro Bridge into the East River after Meir Kahane ended their affair Fatal Attraction A love affair between Rabbi Meir Kahane and a young Christian woman ended in tragedy, but the New York Times chose not to reveal the relationship. A book excerpt. Editor's Note: In Laurelton, Queens in the mid-1960s, Meir Kahane seemed to be just another Orthodox rabbi giving Hebrew lessons. To his neighbors he was a self-effacing teacher who was wonderful with children. But by his own admission, and confirmed by sources in the Justice Depart- ment, Rabbi Kahane and his boyhood friend Joseph Churba spent many of those years liv- ing double lives, renting an apartment in Manhattan under assumed names, and spying on left-wing student groups for the Federal Bureau of Investiga- tion. They also promoted the U.S. position on the Vietnam War in the Orthodox Jewish community for the Central In- telligence Agency. ROBERT I. FRIEDMAN I n June 1966, while living as "Michael King," Rabbi Kahane met a twenty-one- year-old woman named Gloria Jean D'Argenio in a Second Avenue bar. The woman, who worked as a model under the name of Estelle Donna Evans, was more than just another one-night stand. Kahane fell in love with her. Estelle had moved to New York when she was eighteen years old, in search of a modeling and acting career. The adopted daughter of a solid, working-class couple from Bridgeport, Connec- ticut, Estelle was like many single women who flock to New York in search of a glamorous career, yet never quite make it. Still, to all who knew her at that time, she was stunning, with smooth olive skin, long black hair, and a full figure. Kahane, cap- tivated by her looks, played on her frailties. Not long after they met, Kahane proposed marriage. He set the date for August 1, 1966-his birthday. He never told her his real name, nor that he was a rabbi with a wife and four children in Queens. He even visited her house in Bridgeport several times, telling her parents that he worked in a top-secret government job. Two days before their wed- ding, Kahane ended the affair with a "Dear Jane" letter. He confessed that he was mar- ried, though he never admit- ted his true identity. At about 4:30 A.M. on Saturday, July 30, a dis- traught Estelle Donna Evans walked along the lower level of the Queensboro Bridge near the Manhattan side with her roommate, Laura Warner. Sobbing convulsively, Estelle asked her roommate how she could have been such a fool. Afraid that she was going to commit suicide, Laura broke away from her friend and ran toward a passing car and call- ed out: "Help! Help! She wants to jump!" A motorist sped to the foot of the bridge and alerted the police, but not before Estelle bolted for the rail and plunged 135 feet in- to the East River. Incredibly, she survived. Severely in- jured, she was rescued by two policemen, who dived into the water from the Manhattan side of the river. The suicide attempt made the front-page of the Sunday New York Daily News, com- plete with photo of the of- ficers straining to hold Estelle's head above water. The story said, "Miss Evans told police she had become despondent after receiving a letter from her boy friend breaking off their romance." The police found $183 in her handbag and a check drawn to her order for $137. They also reportedly found a letter from Michael King in which he ended their Continued on Page 128 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 47