I wonder if interviews are still in the cards for us...
Sinai interviews into march if I recall, so until you see people mentioning mid march interview dates, you still got a shot.
Doodl3s did a pretty good job describing student life here, I didn't read that carefully, but it sounds like he/she is a 1st year, so I'll throw some 2nd year perspective and address some things that weren't discussed that I think are important.
Sinai is incredibly responsive to student concerns. We have an anonymous evaluation system and we pretty much evaluate any person who so much as looks at us. (in seriousness, EVERY lecturerer/small group leader, even if you only see them once). If a pattern emerges, courses are altered. My class was the first to have histology and physiology integrated, our pharm course is different from the previous years and the first years are experiencing smaller changes (like TAs in Epi and Behavioral Science being removed/pushed into ASM and Brain & Behavior).
I say this to every applicant/pre-med I meet:
GO TO A SCHOOL WITH PASS/FAIL. Make sure they're not pulling a fast one on you and saying it's pass/fail but it's actually honors/pass/fail. Everyone I know at a pass/fail school says it's essential and everyone I know who isn't at one is either jealous or tries to claim they don't think it's any different. I have never met someone who thinks having grades is better. If you've been on this forum for more than 5 minutes, you'll immediately get why having pass/fail the first 2 years of medical school is essential. I honestly can't imagine what it would be like to be at a school where people aren't itching to send out their review sheets or constantly sharing helpful websites or any other study tool they think it beneficial. Actually, I guess I can imagine, and it sounds pretty miserable and catty.
At Sinai, the medical school is the pride and joy of the institution. There are no undergrads and the grad school (which is only biological sciences) is small in comparison to us. The hospital lives and breathes for us but I will admit that this comes at the expense of some infrastructural and extracurricular things that may have been better at your bigger undergrad university. On a day to day basis you're much more likely to notice the benefits than the drawbacks, and anything that the school lacks can be found in NYC.