LITTLE ROCK – The Arkansas man who accused Hillary Rodham Clinton last month of uttering an anti-Semitic slur in 1974 has passed a lie-detector test arranged by The Post.

Paul Fray, who has charged Mrs. Clinton called him a “f- – -ing Jew bastard” after Bill Clinton lost his race for Congress, cleared the polygraph exam administered Sunday near his home here.

“There’s no doubt in my mind that Mr. Fray is truthful,” concluded state-licensed Arkansas polygrapher Jeff Hubanks, who gave the three-hour test.

Hubanks, who has administered 400 to 500 exams, was chosen by The Post from a list of accredited polygraphers in the state.

The findings were reviewed yesterday by another polygrapher, Richard Keifer, a former head of the FBI’s polygraph unit who has over 20 years of experience.

Keifer said he found nothing to indicate Fray was lying.

But Keifer said Hubanks relied on a controversial questioning technique that isn’t accepted by the federal government, although Keifer added that it appeared there were no other options to establish a benchmark for measuring Fray’s physiological responses.

Keifer also said that under the FBI scoring system, Fray’s answer to the slur question would be considered inconclusive. Under another system used by Hubanks and pioneered by the University of Utah, Fray’s answer was scored as truthful.

Keifer said additional testing of Fray was warranted.

“It does not lean toward deceptive,” Keifer said. “If anything, it leans toward truthfulness.”

Clinton’s Senate campaign had no immediate comment.

Fray said afterward that he hoped the results of the polygraph wouldn’t hurt the first lady’s Senate campaign and even expressed his desire that she win the election – but added he feels vindicated about the anti-Jewish slur.

“I proved it today,” Fray told The Post.

“I knew I was telling the truth all along. The truth will set you free – and I’m free of this question.”

Fray was told several times before the exam began that the results would be published in The Post no matter how the test came out – or if he declined to take it.

Hubanks asked two very similar questions to determine if Fray was being truthful about whether Mrs. Clinton made the anti-Semitic remark.

The questions were: “Did you hear Hillary call you a “f- – -ing Jew bastard?” and “Did you hear Hillary call you a “f- – -ing Jew bastard in 1974?”

Fray answered “yes” to both questions and Hubank’s analysis concluded he was being truthful on both counts.

“The physiological responses noted on the subject’s polygraph charts are in such a pattern as to indicate that the subject was truthful in answering the above questions,” Hubanks written report concludes.

Fray, who was Bill Clinton’s campaign manager in 1974, charged in a book published last month that Mrs. Clinton erupted in anger during a knock-down, drag-out election night meeting in a room at the Fayetteville, Ark., campaign headquarters attended by him, his wife, Mary Lee, and the Clintons, who were not yet married.

Another campaign worker, Neil McDonald, stood outside the door and has confirmed Fray’s account.

The charge against Mrs. Clinton first surfaced in Jerry Oppenheimer’s book on the Clintons, “State of a Union,” which hit bookstores last month.

During an emotional press conference in the front yard of her Chappaqua home several days after the allegations became public, the first lady strongly denied she used the anti-Jewish epithet – suggesting it was being brought forward to derail her Senate campaign.

President Clinton backed up his wife.

The first lady’s allies noted that Fray has lost his law license after accepting a bribe, suffers from a brain disorder that causes memory loss, and was addicted to painkillers. They said that no one knew Fray, a Baptist who says his great-grandfather married a Jew, had any Jewish ancestry.

After Mrs. Clinton and her supporters attacked Fray’s credibility and integrity, he volunteered to take a polygraph test during an July 18 appearance on “Good Morning America.”

“The whole bottom line is that if I’m telling a lie, I’d be glad to take a lie detector test,” Fray said.

The next day, The Post sought to arrange for Fray to take a polygraph and was able to schedule it for Sunday after several delays sought by Fray.

The test was given from 3:10 to 6:05 p.m. in Suite 503 at the Holiday Inn Express at the Little Rock Airport.

“I don’t want the people in the state of New York, and particularly the Jewish community, to attach any undue significance to this,” Fray said moments after being informed he had passed the test.

“I want her to win the race. If I was a registered voter in the state of New York, I would vote for her,” added Fray. “She will make an excellent senator.”