@Migos123 : What you check is irrelevant (it certainly won’t help to mark business). Also, if you want to do corporate pharmaceuticals, you may be looking for something like chemistry and business and you would probably be better off with a graduate degree (some people go to get PhDs in chemistry or a bioscience at schools that have business certificate programs or they do a post-doc and pursue an evening MBA to get an edge with those types of jobs) to get anywhere significant with that goal. It is unlikely that you would “come out” with access to that.
You would have been better off having BC out of the way and having 4/5 (ideally 5 on it), either that or opting to get the calc. 1 credit from outside.
I do not think the dual degree is the best fit either. It is certainly a lot of extra work. You would be better off pursuing engineering sciences and maybe aiming for material science concentration (this would also make you competitive for graduate engineering programs) and then taking key upper division courses to learn more about the chemistry that may inform the pharmaceutical and much of the biotech industry (Weinert has a biochem course that helps and the famous Liotta has a drug development course and who better to learn it from. There are fairly elite organic chemistry instructors like Dr Weinschenk or Soria who anyone seriously interested in pharmaceutics should likely take. It is taught in a way far more relevant to someone with that interest than how it is taught at Tech or a lot of schools for that matter). There is currently a student at Emory doing a business/chemistry degree with similar aims and I think it makes more sense. To progress towards a dual degree, you need to jump on math requirements early so getting that BC credit is critical and I would use AP credits wherever possible to get ahead.