According to Princeton University Facilities, the University aims to have 85 percent of plants in its landscape be native to the mid-Atlantic region. Still, there is much work left to be done. These improvements are a credit to the many staff members at Princeton who worked to plan and implement them, and their efforts should be celebrated. The southern edge of campus has been transformed into a mini-meadow, able to house many new insects frolicking alongside the undergrads beginning the fall semester. Skies are now filled with swarms of bumblebees and warblers. Where there were once only low grasses and daffodils, now sprout black-eyed Susan, New England aster and goldenrod. Most striking is the transformation that has occurred just outside the windows of Yeh College and New College West. Returning to campus in the fall, it’s hard to ignore the ways campus has changed as Princeton reshapes itself.
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