Roughneck Juanita's daughter "June" was born in the mid-1940s and is the eldest of Q.D. And hazel. Q. D. He is an oil drilling machine, a crew called "Rough". Over the years, the family lived in Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas. In the first 16 years of her life, she lived in the trailer in June with her father, mother and two younger brothers. Despite social prejudice, educational retreat, and trauma of life she overcame these obstacles.
Since they can contact the car, the roughneck often draws gasoline from the car, this is not common. Unlike the saint who owns his car, the rough neck will have to borrow the parents' cars. This only happens eight to nine times a year. The boys insisted on stealing the car from time to time. Ron committed the most serious crime of the organization. The boy and his unidentified colleague tried to rob the gas station. The station was robbed twice in the same month, but Ron denied any involvement in other theft. When Ron and his accomplice approached the station, the owner was hiding in the bushes next to the station. He spread two of the two gun barrels to two boys in two shells. Ron was seriously injured, and the other boy ran and never caught. He was in crisis for several months, but Ron finally recovered and entered the reformist in the following six months.
William Chambliss studied two child departments, Roughnecks and Saints. Roughnecks are mainly low-grade and poor, like middle-class and rich. The difference between the two children has the same crime rate. He discovered that the teacher, parents, community, and police handled the two departments separately. Roughneck has low cultural, economic and social capital. Therefore, rough neck is considered a trouble maker with a bad child. Saints are considered to be a good child to plant wild wheat. Even if the crimes of children are the same, the saints never encountered problems (Chambliss, 1973)