I dunno man, 70mph and 70mpg is going to be pretty hard for a lot of people to believe, myself included.

You just have to be too far into the throttle at those speeds, the lean burn window is razor thin and almost impossible to hold; the slightest hill will kick you out. It is impossible to keep lean burn once VTEC engages at ~73mph in 5th gear.
It is highly likely that your average speed was very much below 70mph, even if you occasionally did cruise at 70mph. Use your GPS to be sure. I've always said that mpg numbers are pretty useless without average speed, especially in the Insight.
Going 70-80MPH, averaging ~60-65mph, I'll get 50-55MPG in my Insights. Most people don't realize how slow their average speed is. Hills, construction zones, towns, slow drivers in the left lane and the occasional small animal all conspire to lower your average speed precipitously.
I use GPS on every trip - even to verify traffic routes to and from work every day - all of 9-miles. On a northern trip, I reset the trip when I leave Vancouver (often stop by my parents' place), visit in Federal Way for a few days, and look at the reading when I make it back to the Oregon border. Even with a few miles of suburban driving at 40-45mph, I get back to the Oregon border with very close to a 70mph average, depending on the specific trip. Now this is on the FCD - there is no good way to measure without doing a tankfull that you know was measured correctly at the pump(s), but these are its numbers. I have no problem maintaining lean burn on the trip, with the exception of two hills and the purge cycles, between Vancouver, WA and Federal Way, WA. I drive outside of high-traffic hours - 8-10AM, or in the 8PM-1AM range. I get cat purges every couple minutes in summer, but they seem to occur far less frequently in cooler months. I have no idea what controls them.
In my other (modified) vehicle, I have direct ECU access to datalog the flow of my fuel injectors and trusted that accuracy more than I do the Insight's.
I was hoping for a bit more speed with lean burn after I replaced a missing under-engine panel and taped up the wheel strakes, but nothing improved. I doubt I'll get an improvement after replacing my oil-soaked air filter either. I'm curious about the fabricated aluminum under-engine panels available now - anything we can do to smooth the airflow should help. I'd like to see 75mph at 70mpg.
FYI, I "can" drive from Beaverton, OR to Vancouver, WA, and back with well over 80mpg. I think I hit 87mpg once. This was at normal speeds in spring - 55-60mph highway, and about 2 miles of 35mph suburban driving in 3rd gear. This was outside of peak traffic on a holiday weekend. If I can't simply feather the throttle for a long time, I spend much more time at WOT. I typically average only 55-60mpg per tank, mostly because of my 9-mile 40-minute morning commute, and 30-minutes in the evening.
70mph at 70mpg is certainly possible for any 2000 model, without even trying to do anything but maintain the thin line of lean burn at the ~75mpg display mark. Also I'm sure many know, but the display will go down one tick further in cooler months with either cooler weather, or winter fuel blend. Lean burn can be maintained at higher speeds, but it returns a couple mpg less. In winter, the same Federal Way trip often requires 65mph to hit 70mpg. If I have a headwind (rare), 65mpg will be difficult to maintain. I think I once hit ~60mpg at 55mph, in a storm with thick water on the road, and a ton of cross-wind. Same I-5 route!
/endofdigression