This is 2013, and the rules have changed. Changed quite a while back, really. Personally, I wouldn't recommend that ANYone goes to college until they have a definite plan that is based on reality. A degree in "underwater basket-weaving" will never get you a job, and when you're applying for jobs in an unrelated field, that kind of non-sequitur degree is actually a liability.
VintageBikeLover24, you've picked a prospective major, and that's a good start, but what will you do with a Bus.Admin degree after you graduate? If you have some solid business connections already, that's a good degree to have. If you don't.... well, not so much. You *might* make the necessary connections at school, but again, this is 2013. The US economy is faltering; you can't count on making the kind of connections folks used to make in the 70s, 80s, and 90s. It's definitely possible, but it's far from bankable.
I have an advanced degree, and I feel blessed just to have a job that pays all the bills, including the danged student loans. If I could do it all over again, I'd have never touched a single loan... and I might not even have gone to college. Learning a trade seems like the better route, these days. All my siblings have good degrees, a few of us have/are working towards our Master's, but my bro Jeff is the only one making 6figures. Jeff had to leave college after his freshman year; he became a welder, got really good at it, and now he makes more than the rest of us (admittedly, he works a lot of O/T.) Just something to think about. The older generations are still passing out some advice that is no longer relevant. Go to college, get a BA, and buy a house? That describes a surefire way to start a collection of money-pits.
My advice, in a nutshell? Develop a really good plan before you start planning out details like "which school".