6 University police Sgt. Roy Homer patrols the campus during the night shift. University Police: enforcing the rules and keeping the peace by Nancy Neukirchner Staff writer F or many students, the only contact with the University Police Depart ment is waiting in seem ingly never-ending lines for parking stickers or re ceiving those beige slips of paper, instantly familiar, under the wind shield wipers of their cars. Needless to say, the image of the men and women in blue and black on campus is a far cry from the neighborhood po liceman who rescues a dis traught child’s cat from a tall tree. But, in reality, the campus police force is comprised of people who genuinely want to help students. In fact, many of them are stu dents. Mike Ragan, assistant chief of the University Police Department, says that out of 28 patrol officers on the force, 10 are undergraduate and grad uate students enrolled at A&M. Another seven are A&M grad uates, including Ragan. Detective John Phillips, who attended A&M as a member of the Corps, says it helps to know the Aggie lingo, which sounds like a foreign language to peo ple who have never been ex posed to Aggie traditions. “I know why Joe Blow is over in the fish pond,” Phillips says, “and I don’t get excited when I see people carrying a guy over by Rudder. ” Cabrina Scott, who grad-