The 1970's
70's Sports/Leisure
70s Music
70's TV
70's Culture
100

This TV network began in the 1970s as a Florida radio show called Suncoast Bargaineers

Home Shopping Network

100

One story says this 1970s daredevil got his rhyming nickname after crashing his motorcycle while being chased by police as a teen.

Evel Knievel

100

His "Moody Blue" album entered the Top 40 on July 30, 1977; 17 days later, he was dead.

Elvis Presley

100

This star of "The Flying Nun" won an Emmy as Sybil, a woman with multiple personalities.

Sally Field

100

Pong! In the 1970s its 2600 console had a whopping 128 bytes of RAM—a 2017 iPhone has about 3.2 billion.

Atari

200

On July 2, 1976, these two Asian countries officially reunited.

North and South Vietnam

200

This Hall of Fame 1970s Reds catcher "was thinking about making a comeback until I pulled a muscle vacuuming."

Johnny Bench

200

Rock royalty since the 1970s, this guitarist wrote “We Will Rock You.”

Brian May of Queen

200

Full name of the show on which Bill Bixby became angry, became too big for his shirt, and became Lou Ferrigno.

the incredible hulk

200

Invented in the 1970s, this sushi roll named for its place of origin consists of crab, avocado and cucumber.

California Roll

300

1970s action hero Lee Yuen Kam.

Bruce Lee

300

In the 1960s and 1970s, he was professional golf’s leading money winner eight times.

Jack Niklaus

300

1973: Against a black background, a prism bends a beam of light into a colorful spectrum.

Dark Side of the Moon

300

In the 1970s he played Joe Valachi, Vince Majestyk and an Apache named Chato.

Charles Bronson

300

In the early 1970s, Aris created this stretchable brand of leather-trimmed gloves.

Isotoners


400

In 1976, for the first time in a decade, the U.S. issued money in this denomination.

$2 bill

400

This American resigned his World Chess Championship in 1974.

Bobby Fischer

400

Philip Bailey was the mesmerizing lead falsetto singer of this 1970s funk supergroup abbreviated EWF.

Earth Wind and Fire

400

It was the only prime-time TV series to be #1 in the ratings in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.

60 Minutes

400

These very brief and close-fitting shorts for women first became fashionable in the 1970s.

Hot Pants

500

During the 1970s he won the Daytona 500 four times.

Richard Petty

500

This trio had their first top 20 hit in 1967, but didn’t have their first gold record until 1970 with “Lonely Days.”

The BeeGees

500

 Dude, in the 1970s, this comedy team was smokin’.

Cheech and Chong

500

Encarta says clothes with a high content of this plastic fiber became popular in the 1970s.

Polyester

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