Sure, it’s an informal survey, but a New York Times reporter’s finding that eight black college students he spoke to have been stopped by police a collective 92 times is still a disturbing reminder of how the NYPD wields its stop-and-frisk tactics too heavily against the city’s minorities, the Atlantic Wire reports. In The Times article [1] on New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly’s aboutface on the efficacy of stop-and-frisk, Michael Powell talked to group of eight black men currently attending the Borough of Manhattan Community College. “Cumulatively, they said they had been stopped 92 times.” That 11.5 friskings per-person, on average, is shocking, although it’s anecdotal evidence, but it’s the stories of these these kids being frisked for seemingly doing nothing other than driving or riding the subway while black that are alarming…