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License plates of MIT

Custom plates display expressions of scholarship, creativity, and MIT pride among Institute affiliates.
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Omar Abudayyeh smiles next to his white BMW with the license plate, “CRISPR.”
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Caption: As an MIT graduate student in the lab of Professor Feng Zhang, a pioneering contributor to CRISPR technologies, Omar Abudayyeh ’12, PhD ’18 was highly involved in early CRISPR development for DNA and RNA editing. He has continued to make new discoveries in this field, now as an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and affiliate of the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT.
Credits: Photo: Maia Weinstock/MIT
Two photos show: Sam Klein arranging colorful floppy disks on top of his car; the car is covered in floppy disks and has the license plate, “DSKDRV.”
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Caption: Sam Klein works on replacing the floppy disks on his art car, which can often be seen around the MIT campus sporting a “DSKDRV” license plate.
Credits: Image: MIT News, with photos courtesy of Sam Klein
Photo collage: One photo shows Amy Finkelstein and Ben Olken holding Massachusetts "SUPPLY" and "DEMAND" plates. Virginia license plates on a bookshelf read “SPIRAL” and “GALAXY.” SUV has "TAXCO 2" plate.
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Caption: Left: Professors Amy Finkelstein PhD ’01 and Ben Olken share their economic plates. Top right: Stellar license plates of professor of the practice emerita Marcia Bartusiak and her husband, Stephen Lowe PhD ’88. Bottom right: Professor Christopher Knittel drives with a license plate that reflects his work on taxing carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions.
Credits: Image: MIT News, with photos courtesy of the subjects
Two by three grid of photos of license plates reading MITXX, MITGRAD, IHTFP85, MIT 69, WMBR 88, and COURSE 3
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Caption: A selection of MIT-themed vanity license plates, owned by (top row, l-r) Anthony Sinskey ScD ’67; Curtis Smith PhD ’02; Jon Rochlis ’85 and Anne LaVin ’85; (bottom row, l-r) Bob Kasabian ’69; Todd Glickman ’77; and William F. Doyle ’84.
Credits: Image: MIT News, with photos courtesy of the subjects

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Omar Abudayyeh stands on a rooftop next to a white BMW SUV with the license plate, “CRISPR.” MIT lab buildings are in the background.
Caption:
As an MIT graduate student in the lab of Professor Feng Zhang, a pioneering contributor to CRISPR technologies, Omar Abudayyeh ’12, PhD ’18 was highly involved in early CRISPR development for DNA and RNA editing. He has continued to make new discoveries in this field, now as an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and affiliate of the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT.
Credits:
Photo: Maia Weinstock, MIT

What does your license plate say about you?

In the United States, more than 9 million vehicles carry personalized “vanity” license plates, in which preferred words, digits, or phrases replace an otherwise random assignment of letters and numbers to identify a vehicle. While each state and the District of Columbia maintains its own rules about appropriate selections, creativity reigns when choosing a unique vanity plate. What’s more, the stories behind them can be just as fascinating as the people who use them.

It might not come as a surprise to learn that quite a few MIT community members have participated in such vehicular whimsy. Read on to meet some of them and learn about the nerdy, artsy, techy, and MIT-related plates that color their rides.

A little piece of tech heaven

One of the most recognized vehicles around campus is Samuel Klein’s 1998 Honda Civic. More than just the holder of a vanity plate, it’s an art car — a vehicle that’s been custom-designed as a way to express an artistic idea or theme. Klein’s Civic is covered with hundreds of 5.5-inch floppy disks in various colors, and it sports disks, computer keys, and other techy paraphernalia on the interior. With its double-entendre vanity plate, “DSKDRV” (“disk drive”), the art car initially came into being on the West Coast.

Two photos show: Sam Klein arranging colorful floppy disks on top of his car; the car is covered in floppy disks and has the license plate, “DSKDRV.”
Sam Klein works on replacing the floppy disks on his art car, which can often be seen around the MIT campus sporting a “DSKDRV” license plate.
Photo: Courtesy of Sam Klein

Klein, a longtime affiliate of the MIT Media Lab, MIT Press, and MIT Libraries, first heard about the car from fellow Wikimedian and current MIT librarian Phoebe Ayers. An artistic friend of Ayers’, Lara Wiegand, had designed and decorated the car in Seattle but wanted to find a new owner. Klein was intrigued and decided to fly west to check the Civic out.

“I went out there, spent a whole afternoon seeing how she maintained the car and talking about engineering and mechanisms and the logistics of what’s good and bad,” Klein says. “It had already gone through many iterations.”

Klein quickly decided he was up to the task of becoming the new owner. As he drove the car home across the country, it “got a wide range of really cool responses across different parts of the U.S.”

Back in Massachusetts, Klein made a few adjustments: “We painted the hubcaps, we added racing stripes, we added a new generation of laser-etched glass circuits and, you know, I had my own collection of antiquated technology disks that seemed to fit.”

The vanity plate also required a makeover. In Washington state it was “DISKDRV,” but, Klein says, “we had to shave the license plate a bit because there are fewer letters in Massachusetts.”

Today, the car has about 250,000 miles and an Instagram account. “The biggest challenge is just the disks have to be resurfaced, like a lizard, every few years,” says Klein, whose partner, an MIT research scientist, often parks it around campus. “There’s a small collection of love letters for the car. People leave the car notes. It’s very sweet.”

Marking his place in STEM history

Omar Abudayyeh ’12, PhD ’18, a recent McGovern Fellow at the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT who is now an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School, shares an equally riveting story about his vanity plate, “CRISPR,” which adorns his sport utility vehicle.

The plate refers to the genome-editing technique that has revolutionized biological and medical research by enabling rapid changes to genetic material. As an MIT graduate student in the lab of Professor Feng Zhang, a pioneering contributor to CRISPR technologies, Abudayyeh was highly involved in early CRISPR development for DNA and RNA editing. In fact, he and Jonathan Gootenberg ’13, another recent McGovern Fellow and assistant professor at Harvard Medical School who works closely with Abudayyeh, discovered many novel CRISPR enzymes, such as Cas12 and Cas13, and applied these technologies for both gene therapy and CRISPR diagnostics.

So how did Abudayyeh score his vanity plate? It was all due to his attendance at a genome-editing conference in 2022, where another early-stage CRISPR researcher, Samuel Sternberg, showed up in a car with New York “CRISPR” plates. “It became quite a source of discussion at the conference, and at one of the breaks, Sam and his labmates egged us on to get the Massachusetts license plate,” Abudayyeh explains. “I insisted that it must be taken, but I applied anyway, paying the 70 dollars and then receiving a message that I would get a letter eight to 12 weeks later about whether the plate was available or not. I then returned to Boston and forgot about it until a couple months later when, to my surprise, the plate arrived in the mail.”

While Abudayyeh continues his affiliation with the McGovern Institute, he and Gootenberg recently set up a lab at Harvard Medical School as new faculty members. “We have continued to discover new enzymes, such as Cas7-11, that enable new frontiers, such as programmable proteases for RNA sensing and novel therapeutics, and we’ve applied CRISPR technologies for new efforts in gene editing and aging research,” Abudayyeh notes.

As for his license plate, he says, “I’ve seen instances of people posting about it on Twitter or asking about it in Slack channels. A number of times, people have stopped me to say they read the Walter Isaacson book on CRISPR, asking how I was related to it. I would then explain my story — and describe how I’m actually in the book, in the chapters on CRISPR diagnostics.”

Displaying MIT roots, nerd pride

For some, a connection to MIT is all the reason they need to register a vanity plate — or three. Jeffrey Chambers SM ’06, PhD ’14, a graduate of the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, shares that he drives with a Virginia license plate touting his “PHD MIT.” Curtis Smith PhD ’02, professor of the practice in nuclear science and engineering, recently joined the MIT faculty after 33 years at the Idaho National Lab and keeps an “MITGRAD” plate on his convertible in Idaho Falls. Professor of biology Anthony Sinskey ScD ’67 owns several vehicles sporting vanity plates that honor Course 20, which is today the Department of Biological Engineering but has previously been known by Food Technology, Nutrition and Food Science, and Applied Biological Sciences. Sinskey says he has both “MIT 20” and “MIT XX” plates in Massachusetts and New Hampshire.

Photo collage: One photo shows Amy Finkelstein and Ben Olken holding Massachusetts "SUPPLY" and "DEMAND" plates. Virginia license plates on a bookshelf read “SPIRAL” and “GALAXY.” SUV has "TAXCO 2" plate.
Left: Professors Amy Finkelstein PhD ’01 and Ben Olken share their economic plates. Top right: Stellar license plates of professor of the practice emerita Marcia Bartusiak and her husband, Stephen Lowe PhD ’88. Bottom right: Professor Christopher Knittel drives with a license plate that reflects his work on taxing carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions.
Image: MIT News

Christopher Knittel, the George P. Shultz Professor of Applied Economics in the MIT Sloan School of Management, drives with a “TAXCO 2” plate in Massachusetts. (He notes it was supposed to be “TAX CO2” but the space was inadvertently misplaced by the RMV.) “The license plate is meant to represent a critical policy tool for addressing climate change: placing a tax on carbon dioxide emissions,” he says. Such a tax, he argues, “is the most efficient way to address the 'negative externalities' associated with climate change. ... A large portion of my research focuses on understanding the costs and consequences of different environmental policies, so the plate links to my work.”

Several alumni also report driving with plates that reflect their STEM backgrounds and careers. Spencer Webb ’83, an EECS graduate and president of AntennaSys, drives with “ANTENNA.” He explains, “I changed directions eight years out of school and pursued my passion: antennas.” Meanwhile, IT manager and mechanical engineering alumna Sue Kayton ’78 has been the subject of envy with her California “NGINEER” plate: “People leave me notes on my windshield asking if they can buy this plate from me,” she says.

At least three MIT couples have had dual vanity plates. Professors of economics Amy Finkelstein PhD ’01 and Benjamin Olken lovingly drive with dual plates that reflect both their work and their personal connection. “We got ourselves matching his-and-her ‘SUPPLY’ and ‘DEMAND’ license plates as an anniversary present,” Finkelstein says. “What better way is there to express the importance of a relationship? After all, supply is useless without demand and vice versa.”

Says Laura Kiessling ’83, professor of chemistry: “My plate is ‘SLEX.’ This is the abbreviation for a carbohydrate called sialyl Lewis X. It has many roles, including a role in fertilization (sperm-egg binding). It tends to elicit many different reactions from people asking me what it means. Unless they are scientists, I say that my husband [Ron Raines ’80, professor of biology] gave it to me as an inside joke. My husband’s license plate is ‘PROTEIN.’”

Professor of the practice emerita Marcia Bartusiak of MIT Comparative Media Studies/Writing and her husband, Stephen Lowe PhD ’88, previously shared a pair of related license plates. When the couple lived in Virginia, Lowe working as a mathematician on the structure of spiral galaxies and Bartusiak a young science writer focused on astronomy, they had “SPIRAL” and “GALAXY” plates. Now retired in Massachusetts, while they no longer have registered vanity plates, they’ve named their current vehicles “Redshift” and “Blueshift.”

Two by three grid of photos of license plates reading MITXX, MITGRAD, IHTFP85, MIT 69, WMBR 88, and COURSE 3
A selection of MIT-themed vanity license plates, owned by (top row, l-r) Anthony Sinskey ScD ’67; Curtis Smith PhD ’02; Jon Rochlis ’85 and Anne LaVin ’85; (bottom row, l-r) Bob Kasabian ’69; Todd Glickman ’77; and William F. Doyle ’84.
Image: MIT News, with photos courtesy of the subjects

Flori Pierri, assistant curator of science and technology at the MIT Museum, notes: “The MIT Museum has several sets of license plates that belonged to Warren Seamans, the museum’s founder and first director.” The collection includes 1970s iterations of “MITHC” (for MIT Historical Collections, the museum’s first name); a circa 1981 set of “HC-MIT” plates; and a plate reading “MITMUS” after the museum’s name formally changed to MIT Museum.

Other community members have had plates that make a nod to their hobbies — such as Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences and AeroAstro Professor Sara Seager, whose vehicle sports “ICANOE”; radio meteorologist and MIT Corporate Relations Senior Director Todd Glickman ’77, whose “WMBR 88” plate reflects his longtime connection with the Institute’s student radio station; AeroAstro alumnus Jeremy B. Katz ’09, who has “WAN2FLY” in Washington state; and filmmaker and former MIT pole vaulter Lila French '99, MEng '99, who drove with “SHE VLTR” (“she vaulter”) for a few years following graduation.

Still others use their plates to make poignant or playful statements or to connect with fellow drivers. Constantine Psimopoulos, a visiting lecturer in the MIT Educational Studies Program and former MIT cycling coach, drives with “EYZHN,” which comes from Ancient Greek. “Alexander the Great used to say that he owes ‘zhn’ (‘life’) to his parents, and ‘ey zhn’ (‘living well’) to his teacher Aristotle,” he says. Noelle Merritt ’85, who works at IBM, has “HIJKMNO” in California. “People should say ‘there’s no L’ (there’s Noelle),” she explains. “I was driving down the Pacific Coast Highway and a guy pulled up next to me and indicated I should roll down my window. I did, and he yelled, ‘Are you Noelle?’ He was quite excited he’d cracked the code!” 

Closer to campus, Katrina Norman, a lab operations manager in the Institute for Medical Engineering and Science, zooms around Boston with “JETPAK” on her futuristic-looking Mazda Miata. And Julianna Mullen, communications director in the Plasma Science and Fusion Center, says of her “OMGWHY” plate: “It’s just an existential reminder of the importance of scientific inquiry, especially in traffic when someone cuts you off so they can get exactly two car lengths ahead. Oh my God, why did they do it?”

This article has been updated with additional license plate stories from the community. 

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