No, I haven't looked at Illonis. I don't know if my parents want me to go that far out-of-state. I live in Kansas City Missouri and so KU is out of state for me too. But, it's closer than MU and UMR. Also, I have a bunch of family in Kansas that may allow me to use their address. That way I don't have to pay out of state tuition.. But, we'll see.
If you can't get instate, look into the MidWest Student Exchange, it allows a certain number of students from each state to get reduced (usually 1.5 instate) tuition rather than paying full out of state tuition. I definately incourage you to look at KSU's CS program though, I think you'll like it a lot better than KU's which is in my opinion one of the worst ones in the state. Manhattan is about 2 hours from the Missouri side of KC, so its not too bad.
Okay, I will look into that. But, why do you think KU has one of the worse CS program?
Well, for starters, Computer Science does not even have their own department (a rareity for good reason). Instead they are bundled with the Electrical Engineering and Computer Engineering program. This is not good, Electrical Engineering has virtually nothing to do with Computer Science and the fact that you have some professors teaching both EE and CS courses really says a lot about how their CS classes are orriented. The KU CS budget is obscenely lower and they have a reputation for not challenging their students. At KU, CS is one of those departments that has simply been lost in the crowd. The one good thing I can say about it is they do probably have a higher ratio of instructors with English as their primary language. I could rant all day about the things I don't like about KU, but I'll just leave you with this interesting fact: The entire Network infrastructure is run by students (who don't know what they are doing). This backfired on them horribly a year or so ago when their entire (ENTIRE) network crashed because of a virus on one dorm students machine (they have basically no security measures in place, their managed AV is a joke). It took them 8 hours to isolate the problem, 2 days to restore partial internet access in select areas, and 13 days to completely fix everything. The worst part was that this was during dead week/ finals week so tons of students were hit pretty hard.
@ZeroX: what do you have against Green Day?