Brown Vs. Penn - Comp. Sci. and Entrepreneurship

<p>Hey guys, I'm a Junior in high school right now, and I'm in the middle of the college search process. My two top choices at the moment are Brown and Penn. I plan to study both computer science and entrepreneurship, which would hopefully be a double concentration at Brown or the Jerome Fisher M&T program at Penn (which is a dual degree from both the engineering school and Wharton business school). I've heard great things about the computer science department at Brown, and I absolutely love the culture/freedom they offer, but I don't know much about the entrepreneurship program there (they mentioned that it was a fairly new concentration at the info session I went to.) On the flip side, the Jerome Fisher program at Penn seems to be a unique integration of engineering and business, but I really didn't get a feel of the culture when I was there. I'm a very liberal, artistic guy, and definitely want to be in a place where my ideas on life and artistic expression are cultivated as well as just learning the technical skills of my areas of study. So my three questions are as follows:</p>

<ol>
<li>What is the entrepreneurship program like at Brown? Would it even come close to Wharton at Penn?</li>
<li>What is the culture like at Penn? How does it compare to the extreme liberalness of Brown (which I love)?</li>
<li>Which school would you recommend, both academically and culturally?</li>
</ol>

<p>Additional info:
I have a 2310 SAT (superscored), a 4.75 GPA (weighted) and am a legacy at Brown, so it might be easier for me to get into Brown, especially considering how selective the Jerome Fisher program is, but right now I'd like to assume I could potentially be accepted into either. (Also lots of ECs which I won't get into.)</p>

<p>As a stereotype, Penn is more pre-professional than Brown. I’m a Penn alum and my sister went to Brown – really you can’t go wrong with either school so pick the one where you feel most comfortable to and apply early there. Despite your great stats/legacy these programs are reaches for everyone.</p>

<p>I’m guessing Penn is pretty liberal considering it is in Philadelphia (and of course most of the top colleges seem to be liberal anyways).</p>