Take the geometry. I mean, if you are taking already 3 math courses you might pick another one as well. Might be that the things you learn in one can aid you in one other.
I was going to, and then I realized that I need to learn Russian and German for grad school, plus (if I'm lucky) Ancient Greek, Latin, and Chinese for the rest of my career. Plus, I'm already taking two honors courses... admittedly, I'd already finished most of one with perfect grades when I left school, but it's still a big time sink.
And the Russian gives me this incredibly amazing schedule, where I have only one hour of classes on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Admittedly, that hour is at 9 in the morning, but I figure that will keep me honest.
Suppose that depends on how passionate you are about Russian, or if you have a strong desire to learn it, though.
First off, I am (in addition to being a math nut) something of a languages and literature nut. Second off, I will be able to lord this over Aspen's head, because he couldn't deal with Russian
or Arabic. Of course, I can't handle Hupa or any of the other native languages he's smashing himself in the face with, so that may be a moot point.
Depends. Do you feel you have enough maths already for what you want to do, and that diversifying slightly may help for sanity reasons?
If not, and you feel you can always use more maths, then...
There is never enough maths, but learning Russian is the gateway to a heck of a lot more maths than I have right now.
That, and I've heard bad reviews about the classical geometry course. Also, I kind of hate geometry.
I'm currently thinking I'll just get a few textbooks out of a library and go nuts.
Suppose that depends on how passionate you are about Russian, or if you have a strong desire to learn it, though.
And who doesn't have a strong desire to read War and Peace in its native language?
Hmm?
War and Peace... maybe not. Collected works of Dostoevsky: sign me up, please.