Ok.. Before I get started on this question let me say that I have done enough looking into it to know how you feel about people becoming STAR babies and that is not the direction I would like this question to be taken. Finishing my degree is a huge deal for me as it is for most incoming baby nukes, so planning ahead as to when that MAY (future shore duties, online underway, post-Navy, etc.) be accomplished eases the anxiousness a bit. Knowing my options now really helps me be more comfortable about everything.
1) It seems through other posts that now you have to STAR to become a SPU. I also see that as a SPU you have the oppurtunity to go to RPI (provided you get a billet at Ballston Spa). I have enough engineering credits to finish a Nuclear Engineering degree there in probably 1.5 years (I looked through the curriculum already). Are there any comparable degrees in Charleston (to my knowledge the closest high ranking engineering program there would be at USC)? I have a pretty high opinion of RPI as one of the schools I originally applied to.
My reason for asking is I wouldn't want to become a SPU on the basis of going ahead to get my degree and have just a 50/50 shot of actually doing that (Yes, I know that would still mean 4 years of sea duty and no, I don't know what that is going to be like til I get there.

I am aware.) even though from what I can tell that's better odds than getting most other things I want.
College isn't my only reason for looking into potentially pursuing a SPU spot. It has other its other advantages that appeal to me as well, but they aren't part of this thread.
2) If I so choose that RPI is my goal to finish my undergrad... Do I have better chance getting Ballston Spa as a SPU or sea-returnee?
3) I asked all of it in question 1 and 2 but had planned on a 3rd so I thought I'd end with this. I had a physics professor that went to RPI and he told us one of the gameday chants that I will never forget. Enjoy

:
E to the X, DY, DX,
E to the X, DX.
Cosine, secant, tangent, sine
3-Point-1-4-1-5-9.
Square root, cube root, log of pi,
Dis-integrate them, R.P.I.!