Yeah, it's decided. I'm going to do it. It's a daunting task going to school at the age of 25 and starting new, but it should be cool. Thanks for the encouragement. I think I'll keep this in mind till I'm able to work it.
I went back to school for my BSEE at the age of 33. Being an older student has its disadvantages, but overall it's a positive thing. I was much more dedicated and focused than I was my first time in college, and when Spring Break came along and my classmates were down on South Padre Island getting drunk for a week, I was in the library getting a leg up on them.
You will, however, probably not find any vacuum tube courses available and you may have trouble getting a tube amp approved as a project for credit. My advice is to go after whatever will lead you to a job on the outside while you are in school and do the vacuum tube stuff on the side.
BTW and IMO, the future of the world depends on green energy and it's an expanding field even in today's economy. Consider Power EE and the smart grid as a career. Read "Perfect Power" by Robert Galvin. If I were a budding EE, that's where I'd go.
The key to success in engineering school is to hang on like grim death and never never never never give up. Sit front row center in every class and ask lots of questions. Visit every prof in their office hours. Do ALL the reading and homework religiously, and join study groups for every course. Hang out with people smarter than you. Give yourself one night a week to party (it was Fridays for me) and focus on your studies the rest of the time. Be prepared to spend 60-80 hours (and sometimes more) a week on school; engineering school is VERY competitive.
It's no picnic, but nothing worth a damn comes easy. Good luck to you!
EDIT: Check into Co-Op Engineering if your school has it. They will place you with an engineering firm on the outside where you will be exposed to real world work (and get paid for it) on alternative semesters with school semesters once you get to the Junior level. It will slow your graduation a bit, but I wouldn't want to be in a big hurry these days to hit the job market. You'll graduate with genuine experience along with your degree, and the company I co-op'ed with had a job waiting for me when I graduated.