Stay at Riddle - if you can afford it
Yip wrote on 1/24/03 that he has a B.S. in Math and Physics from Michigan State and a Masters from Central Michigan U. Pretty decent educational quals. Not to mention his Navy flying experience (military) which trumps many of us civilian pukes in the eyes of H.R. I haven't quite understood his point of view about not getting the degree, except that he has stated repeatedly that he is just giving an alternate point of view. I'd still get the degree, in something. I love an Aeronautical Science degree but I'm not wed to it. As Falcon Capt. noted, 9000 hours of jet with no medical and no degree/fallback plan and a quarter will buy you a cup of coffee (or maybe a groundschool teaching job or sim instructor job if you thought to get your AGI-IGI).
I think a lot has to do with your pocketbook, Russ. I'd go for Riddle if you can afford it. If not, there are excellent and cost-effective alternatives at state or other colleges. If you go AF, your military flight time will give you an advantage in getting interviews. Airlines love military pilots, but military is still no guarantee.
My good friend and ERAU examinee Falcon Capt. and I had a discussion about corporate flying when he was in town a few months ago. He asked why I didn't consider it instead of beating my head against the wall pursuing regional flying. I've thought about it since then, and perhaps I should have. Great jobs paying great money, international flying experience, and great equipment. Back in my day, though, such jobs were hard to get and took years. I tried, briefly. In any event, as Falcon Capt. notes, corporate could have more potential than airline flying.
Hope these thoughts help. Once more, good luck with whatever you decide.