http://conwebwatch.tripod.com/stories/2000/slur.html
"Fray was the target of the alleged 1974 '(expletive) Jew bastard' comment. As an Associated Press story points out, Fray 'can no longer practice law because someone paid him to alter a court document and he surrendered his law license to the Arkansas Supreme Court in 1980. He suffered a cerebral hemorrhage that led to seizures, addiction to prescription pain killers, erratic behavior and memory loss, according to court records. He wrote a letter to Clinton begging her forgiveness for saying things about her 'without factual foundation.'"
[continuing]: "NewsMax says nothing about Fray's letter or his disbarment, but briefly mentions his memory problems, buried deep in a story and cited as evidence that "the White House and its media allies" was trying to 'discredit' Fray."
This David Limbaugh article has a number of leads that might offer possibilities: http://www.jewishworldreview.com/david/limbaugh071900.asp
A visibly angry and emotional Mrs. Clinton questioned the credibility of Fray and the others cited in the book. Her campaign released copies of a handwritten letter, dated July 1, 1997, that Fray allegedly wrote Mrs. Clinton.
In the letter, Fray states: ''I have wronged you. I ask for your forgiveness because I did say things against you, and called you names, not only to your face - but behind your back ... names that are unmentionable.''
Fray adds: ''At one time in my life, I would say things without thinking, without factual foundation ... I beg your forgiveness.''
Mrs. Clinton said she was releasing the letter to show that ''there's a history of these kinds of charges coming from the people in question. They've been false in the past. They're false now.''
She wouldn't comment what sort of statements Fray was apologizing for in the letter.
In Monday's New York Times, Fray acknowledged writing a letter of forgiveness to Mrs. Clinton but said he would have to see it first to determine if what she released was what he wrote.
The Clinton campaign also released a statement from the president in which he said, in part: ''I was there on election night in 1974 and this charge is simply not true. It did not happen.''