You know, I'm going to throw out something that is my opinion only, but many people I know share it with me when I've mentioned it. Except for a few majors, colleges are hype as to which one you have to go to for the best jobs and careers. I went to Engineering School at UF which was ranked 11th in the country with CIT and MIT 1st and 2nd at the time. I didn't go there because of that though. I went because it was close to where I lived and it was in state so tuition was much less.
Now the basis of my opinion? When I got out of college, my first job asked for my transcripts, where I graduated, my GPA, ect. I've worked for countless companies as an employee and a contractor for the past 15 years and since my first job, do you know how many times I've been asked where I went to college and for my transcipt? Zero! No one has ever mentioned it or cared since and it has never affected my salary at all. All they cared about was that I have a piece of paper that says I have BS in Engineering and what experience I've had in the workplace.
I'm not saying this is the case for every profession and if you are one of those that feel that you need a prestigious school on your resume and to belong to some national society, then be my guest. I've worked with Harvard, MIT and Princeton grads and they didn't make any more than I did. To be honest, most of them were a pain to work with as they thought God pointed the sun straight up their butts every morning when they woke up but some were pretty cool. Of course there was the one that caused me to get sent to the principals office (HR). Every time he opened his mouth in a meeting the first words were "At Harvard, blah blah blah." I told him in front of God and everybody the next time I heard how they did it a Harvard I was going to shove an umbrella up his butt (I used the A word) and open it. Everyone in the room thought it was funny. Evidently he didn't. HR laughed it off, made him think he accomplished something and he ended up leaving about 3 weeks later because everyone lost all respect for him.
Back to my point. IMHO, once you get that piece of paper that says you have a BS or BA or Masters or whatever, when you get past your first job it pretty much goes by what your experience is and what you know and yes quite often who you know.
If you feel both schools will give you a quality education, I'd go with the second one and move on but that's just me.