UCSD would be a good choice; they almost always take two of their own med students as ophtho residents, which is a huge advantage. Other schools that have amazing ophtho departments (for those all-important connections) are UCLA, UCSF, Oregon, Utah, Univ of Illinois @ Chicago, UMich, Emory, Harvard, Columbia, Mt Sinai, Johns Hopkins, Jefferson, UMiami, Baylor, UT Southwestern. I'm sure I'm missing lots but there's a start. Of course those schools are all relatively hard to get into. That said, I always feel like people going to Jefferson or UMiami luck the eff out though. They're generally considered mid-tier schools, and yet they have two of the most respected ophtho programs in the country. If you go there you've got it made.
Re: specialties, it's way too early to consider that. But you should know that there's really a huge range of "styles" represented, from the heavily hardcore surgical (surg retina) to the very long-term-patient-relationship-y (uveitis) to even a meat-and-bones field (plastics). It's really an amazing specialty; small wonder people are falling over themselves to get in!
Also I think ENT/Ophtho is one of the most common splits out there. I must've met like 10,000,000 people who'd looked at both. It's pretty easy to see why; they're SO similar on paper -- both 75% outpatient clinic, 25% surgical; both pretty gadgety; both well-paying and "good lifestyle"; both hard to get into and thus attractive to high achievers. Funny thing is when you're actually rotating, they feel so incredibly different. Which I guess gets back to my earlier point -- you can read all you want, and I certainly encourage you to, but at some point you really should try to set up a shadowing experience. If you fit that ophtho really is something you might be interested in, you should continue that throughout the first 2 years of med school to lay a foundation of interest.