A lot of names that are ubiquitous in the Midwest were also popular elsewhere during the time.
Donna,
Lisa, and
Debbie (
Deborah) are the office ladies in their 60s. Every institution has an efficient handyman/building manager named
Steve (probably really
Stephen) who is on the brink of retiring.
Among older men (98-60) in my corner of the Midwest,
Don (probably short for
Donald) seems to have been popular. There are even more men named
John and
Robert and
William, but they're perennials all over.
Don is every 10th grandpa it seems. According to statistics,
Donald had a run of popularity in the USA, but I'm guessing that half of the men contributing that statistic were born somewhere in the Midwest. Old ladies in nursing homes have in their eucre or hand-and-foot group a
Mary,
Mary Alice,
Helen, or
Margaret (
Peggy or
Margie) and a friend named
Dorothy who just passed.
There seem to have been a crop of men born sometime in the 1960s with one syllable names that include but are not limited to
Glen,
Dale,
Lane, and
Craig. It is suspected that their parents were hippies. They may have a sister named
Dawn.
Women born during the 90s will have at least one friend named
Kate, Katherine/Kathryn, Katelyn/Caitlin,
Kayla, one named
Jessica, and former classmates named Sara(h) and
Rachel (
Rachael). 90s kids were on a soccer team with a
Brice,
Brock, or
Blake or all three plus a
Nathan.