I took CLAS-C 101 Ancient Greek Culture with Margaret Foster and REL-A 210 Intro to the Old Testament with Jason Mokhtarian for the WC+A&H requirements. I was able to get an A in both without putting forth a ton of effort. Both classes were fairly interesting for the first half or so of the semester and seemed to drag towards the end, but I’d expect that would be similar for most of those classes.
I would just get on here: http://gened.indiana.edu/Students/courses.html and search for some that sound interesting. Then look on https://one.iu.edu/task/iu/igps-plan to see if they are being offered this semester and have open seats. If they are, go to http://gradedistribution.registrar.indiana.edu/ to check out the grade distributions, and finally ratemyprofessors.com to see professor reviews. Take the reviews with a grain of salt, but have been fairly accurate most of the time in my experience. You won’t be able to register any earlier than your orientation date, but there should be some spots open for classes you need until the very end. They will add more sections of business classes if they fill up.
I think it would be a good idea to move finite to 1st semester since you have taken stats. The material is very similar and it will be fresh in your mind. I’d also add a gen ed class to 1st semester. That would leave you with 13 credits, and you could add compass to bring it up to 14.5. If stuff is full, swapping K204 for any of the 3 credit classes would work too.
So maybe something like this:
Business Presentations - 3
Finite - 3
Accounting - 1 (ideally 1st 8 weeks)
Compass - 1.5
Gen ed - 3
Econ - 3
Total: 14.5
Also, why do you want to take honors finite and econ? Just wondering. I don’t know anything about either of those classes, but they might be fine. Regular finite should be easy for you since you have taken stats and have high test scores. I would recommend C106 and K204 over the regular versions. Also, just worry about planning your 1st semester now. You will have lots of options for 2nd semester, and it will be easier to figure out what to take once you get a feel for 1st semester classes.