She was supposed to be a business student, not a legend. Hitchhiking on an ordinary May day in 1972, Pam Hardy climbed into Jim “Jungle Jim” Liberman’s yellow Corvette and never looked back. She traded classrooms for quarter-miles, learning to pack parachutes, check fluids, and coax a temperamental Funny Car toward glory. The braless tops and tiny shorts grabbed attention, but her grit, loyalty, and work in the pits earned respect in a sport that rarely gave women any.
When Jim died in a violent crash in 1977, the roar of Pam’s world went silent. She walked away from working with other drivers, but not from the community or the man who had changed everything. Decades later, now living quietly yet still adored at events, Jungle Pam remains the living pulse of a vanished era—proof that some sparks never truly burn out.