Struggle to meet as rita braver will report in our cover story. That looks better. Cathy warren spends both of her day looking after her 92yearold stepfather. What would happen if you werent around to care for him . There is no plan and i shudder to think what would happen to him. Okay. But what about those who dont have someone like cathy . Later on sunday morning, the crisis in longterm care. Osgood on to pete rose, a former ballplayer with several Major League Records to his name. Along with the stigma that the passage of years has failed to lift. He talks this morning with our lee cowan. I was wrong 100 percent no. Question about it. Fires. It has been 25 years since pete rose baseballs alltime hit leader was banned from the game for gambling. What were you doing when betting on baseball that you would get caught . No, no. I didnt think about it. As the world series gets underway this week, we will hear from the hit king about life, baseball and his spots on the hall of fame, ahead on sunday morning. Osgood there are those who dont know who danny aiello is, dont feel bad, it doesnt, he doesnt seem to know who he is either, or so he will tell tracy smith. Danny aiello portrayed all kinds of characters in 90 movies. If i marry you my mother will die. What the hell but when he is not acting, he becomes a mystery. My difficulty is being who i really am, when i am, but i am not quite sure who that is. Danny aiello figures out who he is coming up on sunday morning. That was nice. All right osgood arcade fire is a canadian rock band with an unusual name and unique sound to match. If you dont know them, it is time you are introduced. Anthony mason will take care of that. They charted two number one albums, but you may not have met arcade fire. Went to montreal. I wonder nice to meet you. Ahead on sunday morning, we will introduce you to the epic sounds of arcade fire. Osgood talked to jon lapook puts the Ebola Outbreak in perspective. Jan crawford shows off the colorful screens of baltimore and Steve Hartman has the story of two hearts on the mend, and more, but first the headlines for this sunday morning, the 19th of october, 2014. At the is a vatican this morning pope francis, pope paul the sixth, which puts the late pontiff on the path to sainthood. Yesterday twoweek vatican meeting with bishops rejecting franciss attempt to soften the churchs stance on divorce and gay catholics. Canada says it will make a small quantity of its experimental ebola vaccine available to the World Health Organization to use in the hard hit nations of west africa. The Supreme Court will allow texas to enforce its strict voter identification law in the upcoming election. Critics of the law say it could define, deny poor latinos and blacks of their right to vote. What appears to be a sad ending to the search for 18yearold Hannah Graham the university of virginia student who disappeared five weeks ago, Juliana Goldman reports from washington. Reporter a search team found human remains on saturday while combing an abandoned property just outside of charlottesville. Officials cautioned against jumping to conclusions but they called the find a Significant Development and Charlottesville Police chief timmy luongo says the department made the difficult phone call to grahams parents. Thousands of hours have been spent by literally hundreds of Law Enforcement and civil volunteers in an effort to find hannah. We think perhaps today proved their worth. Autopsy and official identification are yet to come, but the police say the graham case is now being treated as a death investigation. Graham was last seen at the downtown mall in charlottesville and went missing early on the morning of september 13th, they charged 32yearold Jesse Matthew with his disappearance he is in custody after being arrested in Galveston Texas last month. Hundreds of volunteers were supposed to search for graham at a gathering today, but that event has now been canceled. For sunday morning i am Julianna Goldman in washington. Osgood . About 18,000 homes remain without power in bermuda after it was battered by hurricane gonzalo on friday. Meanwhile in the pacific hurricane anna is passing south of hawaii but Still Producing strong winds, high surf and heavy rains there. As for the rest of us, it looks took a day of classic fall weather across the country, with a few scattered storms, the week ahead had been mostly pleasant though some rain is likely in the northwest and northeast. Ahead pete rose. In your heart of hearts, do you think you are going to get it the . Yes. You do . Sure. Baseballs outcast. But next i had the support to live the kind of life i want to. In search of a helping in macarthurs world, he opposes new laws to ensure women receive equal pay for equal work. And macarthur opposes a womans right to choose backed by a group that would outlaw abortion even for rape and incest. For us in the real world, Aimee Belgard. Aimee will fight for equal pay and protect a womans right to choose. Aimee belgards on our side. Im Aimee Belgard and i approve this message. Osgood Senior Citizens whose finances fall in the middle, not rich, not poor, and find themselves in a real bind if they need home care, an their loved ones can find themselves caught in the middle as well. Our cover story is reported now by rita braver. In is my calm before the storm. It kind of centers me. But cathy warren is still keeping watch out her window. On her 92yearold stepfather next door. As lodge as i know he is sitting there doing manager, i know hes fine. Hey, day dad. Most of the rest of her dad, in a modest Mobile Home Park in hayward, california will be spent on his care. Almost done, dad. Okay. Every day. There you go. Thank you. You are welcome. I havent been able to visit my son. I havent been able to see my granddaughter. My life is really on hold. Shes been looking after him full time since her mother died four years ago. Do you feel lucky that you have someone like cathy in your life . Absolutely, yes. Indeed. Like i say, i wouldnt know what to do without her. That looks better. Good. And warren, 66, a Breast Cancer survivor, who herself struggles to get by, has been unable to get any government help for her stepdad. Is it surprising to you that there is just no place where people know that they can turn when they get into this situation . Its surprising to me now, but back when i was working this wasnt even on my radar. And all of a sudden i found out that there are, really are no resources out there for somebody who is in the situation that my dad is. He is kind of in the middle. In the middle. Not poor enough to qualify for medicaid, which, unlike medicare, does cover many longterm care expenses. And not rich enough to pay for longterm care. So the burden falls on his stepdaughter. I dont look at that as a sacrifice. I just look at it as the way life is right now and much like when i went through cancer, it is just one day at a time. I think we need to zip this zipper. And he is not alone. According to the Family Caregiver alliance, some 45 million americans are currently caring for an elderly family member. I cant tell you the number of people at that have told me they have given up everything, they have sold cars, they have sold property, they have sold furniture, they have sold things that they otherwise would have kept, just to pay for their parents care former Democratic Senate majority leader tom daschle says the problem of longterm care is becoming a national crisis, as more of us are living longer with limited resources. Care is highly fragmented, and as a result Available Services and support are not coordinated. He and a Bipartisan Group of former Public Officials have created a task force to try to draw attention to the issue. Is there an estimate of how many people aged, say, 65 and older will at some point in their lives need longterm care . The amazing sat, and it is still one that its hard for me to get my arms around is that 70 percent of people over the age of 65 will need care of some kind, whether in home or in institutions before the end of their lives, 70 percent. That is tens of millions of people, and while there are insurance policies that cover longterm care expenses, they are out of financial reach for many. Unfortunately, only seven percent of people who are in need of longterm care are able to rely on the private Insurance Options today. I mean, these are really big issues for most families. And you tend to put them off until you really have to address them. No one wants to talk about it. Its awful the title of cartoonist roz chasts illustrated memoir says it all, just named a finalist for the National Book award, its the story of the decline of her late parents, her dad, a Brooklyn Public School teacher, her mom, a vice principal. You found yourself more and more playing the role of helper. And you were very frank in saying you really didnt want to. Well, i didnt want to, and they didnt want me to. So it was kind of like nobody wanted any of this to be happening, but it does. Her parents, like many older americans, resisted leaving home for assisted living, the place, as they called it. When in their nineties they finally made the move, worrying about expenses took a huge toll on the whole family. Make sure to scrimp and save every penny of your precious earnings and when your scrimpings run out go into your childrens scrimp pings play and win the lottery, apply for a guggenheim, 4, start smoking and five, take hemlock. There are other options. In boston, a group of seniors has banded together. I have the support to live, within reason, live the kind of life i want to. It is called the village movement. It began in 2001, when Susan Mcwhinney morse and some like minded friends determined not to go into facilities for the aging founded beacon hill village. We are going to somehow or other create a way to stay in our own homes thats responsible, that is safe, that will not be dependent upon our children, but allow us to live our lives the way we want to, and yet access help when we needed it. Today, beacon hill village has 340 members, who pay dues oh door. Well, i can do what i want to do when i want to do it. I can eat what i want to when i want to eat it. There are enough people around that i dont really get lonely. Membership also provides a number of paid trips to the doctor, and the grocery store. Want me to look for that . A small staff, along with many volunteers, assist with any number of large and small robs. You can call and say, i am losing my hearing. I really dont know what i should do. Theres a group of people that will advise you. 60 rep anythings as many reps as you can do. 83yearold roger cox says the village not only gives him a regular exercise group, but also peace of mind. As a male, and feeling statistically that i would go before my wife, if something happens she can pick up the phone and call with any kind of question and get direction or support. The folks at beacon hill village realized the nationwide immediate for such services, when the New York Times ran a story about them. Within two weeks we had 1,000 phone calls from all over the country saying, is. A village here how do we start a village . How did you do it . Why are you doing it . Will you help us . There are now 140 villages across the country and over 100 more in development. And tom daschle believes that such Grass Roots Solutions will be the answer, because federal officials just dont want to deal with the crisis in longterm care. Right now, the political polarized environment we face precludes any serious attempt to address it. Meanwhile for caregivers like kathy warren, there is no relief in sight. What would happen to him if you werent around to care for him . Theres no plan,. Look at the little girl over here. And i shudder to think what would happen to him hopefully i will never find that out. Next, the man who helped put the move in movies. And now a page from our sunday morning almanac. October 19th, 1862, 152 years ago today. The debut of a future film making pioneer. For that was the day auguste lumiere was born in a small town in france. Together with his younger brother louis, auguste lumiere improved on Thomas Edisons early projector making it possible for more than one person at a time to watch a movie. Their first exhibition in late december 1895 featured ten short films, beginning with a shot of workers leaving the lumiere factory, cutting edge cinema for its time, believe it or not. In 1897 they startled audiences with this sequence of a train arriving at a station. Realistic enough that some easily panicked viewers reportedly headed for the exits. More shocking still that year was this sequence of a dancing skeleton. Scary stuff, no bones about it. Other films would follow, though in 1910 auguste lumiere left the movie business and devoted the rest of his life to medical research. He died in 1954 at the age of 91, but his early film making efforts are still remembered, by this star on the hollywood walk of game. Game. Coming up. It is works of art you dont see anywhere else and i am real proud of that. Osgood baltimores homegrown craft. This portion of sunday morning is sponsored by viking river cruises, exploring the world in comfort. 1 enclave. Osgood this is a window screen, not just a screen, though. This is a screen gem, what you can see in a dwindling number of windows the one of our nations most distinctive cities. We have arranged a walking tour. As works of art, these landscapes may not look like anything special, there is usually a house, some trees, a lake. But these paintings once defined a city and dreams of generations past. I always considered baltimore an Outdoor Museum when i was young, because everyone had a pretty some type of scene. They were painted window screens, a unique folk art tradition going back 100 years, once seen on nearly every row house in the working class neighborhoods of baltimore, maryland. These were one ethnic enclave chockablock next to another. Little bohemia was next to a german enclave, next to an italian enclave, and the painted screen was just another way of saying, this is my home and i am proud. This is a Beautiful House by the way. Notice sort of the redstone here. Baltimore native elaine eff is the expert on painted screens. She founded the painted Screen Society in 1985, wrote a book, and produced a documentary on the little known folk tradition. Dont you think it is more attractive than an old ugly black screen, a dark screen . I think it is an art that you dont see anywhere else and when you have Something Like that you are really proud of it. Which i feel proud. According to eff, the mesh art started in 1913 with a grocer from former czechoslovakia named william octavec. He would put his produce out on the street corner, and needless to say in a baltimore summer it perish fast. And so he said how am i going to show what i sell here but not put it outdoors . So he painted a picture of the produce and the alternates he sold on his screen doors. The screens became art, but with a purpose. While letting airflow through during the hot summer days, the paintings kept people from seeing inside. You had no trees. Cement sidewalk. The streetcar lines running down the street, very, very few trees. So they wanted trees. They wanted a country seen. Tom lipka is considered one of the last masters. A 78yearold retired technician for the Baltimore Department of transportation, his passion lies in painting screens. Growing up in the citys polish neighborhood, lipka had an aptitude for art and he began painting screens at the tender age of ten. And what would you get in the old days, back in the day for one screen . When i first started it might have been 50 cents a screen, which to me was big money. They cant see in the house but you can see out. You can see out, just, you can just barely see a little hint. Sylvia chapel sherman grew up in the row house neighborhood in the 1960s. When i was small, every house had the painted screens. And it was all this look. You had a house. You didnt always have swans and a lake, you know, or a little bridge. She now had has her own red bungalow part of an effort by eff and city officials to save this baltimore tradition, which started disappearing with the advent of the air conditioner. We are really losing the community, you know . Because everything is being upgraded instead of trying to keep it, you know . With and then they are tearing it down. And once they tear it down, its gone. So this is a way of kind of preserving, its helping preserve this identity of the community . Uhhuh. Yes, it is. It really is. Baltimore artists today are once again embraces the fading tradition, an authentic connection to the citys past. Tom lipka is hoping to pass on the brush, to a new generation. Its a very simple process, anybody can do it. Anybody can do it . Anybody can do it, now granted most people are not great artists. Anybody can do it. Really, anybody can do it . Anybody can do it. Grant you, most people are not great artists. They will never be in the big national museums, and that is not the idea. The idea is to have something that is going to last. Something that people enjoy and will continue to enjoy long after the artist is gone. I will get in trouble foretelling this story but i will tell it anyway. What are you going to do . Suspend me . Still to come, pete rose speaking out. I wanted to walk. I wanted to ride a bike. Osgood and a story with heart. Osgood how do you know we have ebola on our minds . We discovered that stores around the country report selling out of hazmat suits to be used for halloween costumes. We asked our chief medical correspondent jon lapook to sort things out. Ebola is a frightening virus, thats for sure. So its understandable why there is widespread anxiety but theres also been some illogical panic. Here are some things to help put the handful of ebola cases diagnosed in america in perspective. Ebola is spread by direct contact with body fluids, its not spread through the air the way influenza is. If it were there would be millions of cases of ebola throughout africa, just as there are tens of millions of flu cases in this country every year. Patients with ebola are not infectious until there are symptoms. Every single Ebola Outbreak in africa over the past 40 years has been brought under control with Standard Public Health measures. Basically isolating infected patients and tracking down their contacts. Ebola has a mortality rate of about 70 percent in the current epidemic in west africa, but as a colleague of mine has said, it has never before collided with modern medicine, although no drug has been proven effective yet, treatment such as intravenuenous fluids to correct severe dehydration will likely dramatically improve outcome. So far, there has been one death among eight patients treated in america. Its a near certainty more individual cases will continue to reach other countries until the epidemic in africa is controlled, but individual cases will not lead to widespread outbreaks if Healthcare Workers make diagnoses quickly and the correct protocols are followed. This will protect Healthcare Workers from ebola as weve seen at special centers such as emory and nebraska no ebola patient has been died and no Healthcare Worker has gotten infected still who people are understandably nervous. Significant mistakes were made after Thomas Eric Duncan traveled from liberia and showed up at a dallas hospital with ebola. And its clear not every hospital in america is prepared to deal with the virus. Thats why future patients will likely be transferred to Specialized Treatment Centers just as was done last week with the two nurse it is infected by mr. Duncan. And medical Centers Across the country arent assuming they are more prepared than the hospital in dallas was. Thats why they are practicing what theyd do if an infected patient walks into their emergency room. One things for sure, there will be a learning curve and mistakes can never be totally eliminated. But if we keep finger pointing to a minimum and learn from our mistakes we will get ebola under control in the united states. And as we battle the relatively small number of cases here, we have to understand, the single most effective step our country can take to eliminate the threat in america is to help wipe ebola out in west africa. Osgood and next. Rose swings. Osgood pete rose. Its sunday morning on cbs and here again is charles osgood. Osgood pete rose is a baseball legend whose remarkable accomplishments on the field have been overshadowed by the date 25 years ago when he was banned from baseball for betting on his own teams games. This astonishing fall from grace. He talks with our lee cowan. A standing room only crowd and cincinnati on its feet. I had more pleasurable nights in baseball than anybody that ever played the game. Rose looking for hit 4192 and it is one ball, one strike. I am part of history. I am part of history. You know . And there is no question in my mind, ill die the hit king. I will die the hit king. Fires, rose swings. And there it is there it is rose has eclipse cobb. Thats number 4192. No matter what you think of pete rose you cant deny what an electric moment that was. On september 11, 1985 rose became baseballs alltime major league hit leader, a record that still stands today. And for baseball this is one of the alltime great moments. And yet the debate over whether his cardinal sin, gambling on baseball should keep him out of the hall of fame for hive, remains as fierce as ever. Number one, baby. Although there is little debate in his hometown of cincinnati, here in the queen city, pete rose is king. Pete rose, hall of fame, all day long. Best ever to play the game. He still goes to opening day, just like he did as a kid. Up there i needed oxygen. I didnt care. Up there is better than home. And up there is better than going to school. Every time he is up in the stadium jumbo tron reds fans go wild. He grew up five miles from here, often ditching school to see the reds play. School was really never your thing . No, except to play football. You know, my biggest love in high school was football. Not baseball . Not baseball. I was a better Football Player than i was a baseball player. So how did you come ou out of football into baseball then . Well, i was lucky because i had an uncle who was a scout for the reds. This is sad to say, but if i had not had an uncle who was a scout for the reds, i would never have gotten an opportunity to play for the reds. Here is scrappy infielder for rose, a smart 350 average and a fine glove man too. Maybe he overcompensated. He played so hard he got a nick game, charliely hustle. He won games but he didnt always win friend in the clubhouse. What was it like your rookie year . I mean, how were you accepted by the rest of the team . I wasnt. I wasnt. You throw this brash young kid in there from cincinnati. And i was brash, i wasnt cocky but i was very confident the way i played. You werent cocky, though . No, i wasnt cocky. If i was cocky, well maybe i was cocky but i wasnt arrogant, there is a big difference. Rose was called up to the majothemajor leagues in 1963. He lived with his parent his rookie year, in this home at the end of braddock street on cincinnatis west side. All those row of trees used to be a little ball field for me. Really . Right in the backyard. Ed it assist just above the banks of the ohio river whereas a kid rose worked on a ferry. That ferry. Boone county number 7. Thats the actual one you worked on . Yeah. Thats it right there. This is more or less the joy of riding the ferry back and forth, you know, like a river captain. We rode across the ohio to a park rose wanted to show us. We used to play on this field more than that one. As a teen, this is where he honed his baseball skills. They even named a diamond after him, and thats not all. The and now, guy to the reds games, where are they playing at . On pete rose way. What do you think when you see that now . Am i alive . I remember the first time i went over the bridge and saw that big freeway sign i looked at arnie, my buddy, i said, am i dead . Because youre supposed to be dead when youre names is on a street. Rose helped lead the big red machine to. Rose helped lead the big red machine to two world series championships and a third with the philadelphia phillies. In addition to being Major League Baseballs alltime hits leader, rose also holds the record for the most career at bats, the most career singles, the most games ever played, just to name a few. When i go to talk to independent leagues or minor league teams, i tell them, and it is the truth, i tell them i look them right in the eye and let me tell you guys something, everybody in this clubhouse has more talent than me but none of you will accomplish anything i did, because i am going to oklahoma out work you. I have more enthusiasm than you and more desire than you. Those are godgiven talents too. Not just a strongarm, power, but enthusiasm is a god given talent you cant teach enthusiasm and desire, you either got it or you dont. And i had it. And that is number 3,000. Had it indeed and loyal fans havent forgotten his Hard Scrabble style of play. Thats a picture of when he broke the record. I mean, that is a hard record to break. But despite those records, at 73, the closest pete rose can get to the game these days is signing his name for money. You are pete rose. He lives in las vegas where he is engaged to a playboy model, what would be his third marriage. Most days, you can find him here, signing autographs at the art of music, a memorabilia shop in the mandalay bay resort and casino. Thats where i broke stan musials record. Hes got all manner of things to sign, bats and balls, photos and jerseys, some cheap, some not so much. How much is this . 800. Really . How many do you want . You belong in the hall of game. An argument can be made that pete rose is more popular for not being in the hall of game than had he made it in. Is there he cub fans in here why . His name is good enough to pack in audiences, in this case, to help raise money for a local theatre in cincinnati. I remember one time in 1967, i am going to get in trouble foretelling this story but i am going to tell it anyway. What are you going to do . Suspend me . He is still asked to endorse products, everything from pizzas to athletic wear here. Hi, pete rose here, in the hall. In a recent ad for skechers he even made his banishment a punch line. Pete, youre not supposed to be in the hall. I cant catch a break. I think its pathetic. I think the whole current pete rose situation is sad. I almost feel sorry for him, i mean, i am close. But not quite . But not quite. Because i think he never really understands what it means to say i am sorry. Fay vincent hopes baseball never lets pete rose near the game again. He took over as baseballs commissioner in 1989 just after bart giam at t i, the man who banished rose in the first place. One of the games greatest players have engaged in acts that stained the games and must live with the consequences of those acts. Rose not only bet on baseball but he bet on his own team, while he was managing, never to lose, he says, always to win. But gambling had been the third rail of baseball ever since the Chicago White sox took money to intentionally lose the world series back in 1919. He was such a great ballplayer and he cared about the game, but he cared about money even more. How could someone who loved the game of baseball as much as you did and do have risked it all . Thats a good question, i cant answer it. I wish i had an answer. I usually got an answer for everything. I just simply, the best way to say it is, i screwed up. Were you worried though when you were betting on baseball that youd get caught . No, i didnt even think about it . But you knew it was wrong . Sure i did. Sure i did. But, you know, you think, i dont want to say bigger than the sport, but you just there is you just i am not going to get caught, you know . Nobodys going to know. What baseball wanted was at least an apology. Instead for 15 years rose denied it all. I did not bet on baseball. Do you wish you had come clean sooner . Sure, sure i did. Yeah, i wish i would, sure. How come you didnt . I dont know. Pete said what do i do to help baseball . How do i make this great game better . I made a mistake, i am willing to do penance, how do i do it . What do you think i should do . He never said that. Do you think he would have, maybe it wouldnt have been a lifetime ban if he had i think there is every indication that if he had really understood and people had coached him and he had gotten the word, hed be back in baseball today. In your heart of hearts, do you think you are going to get in . Yes. You do . Sure. I dont know if i am going to live to ee it. Someone, at some period of time, will feeled it in their heart to give me a second chance. I might be six feet under, but thats thats what you have to live with. Baseball may keep him out of the hall of fame, but it cant keep him out of cooperstown new york. Pete rose is in the building. Pete rose is now signing. Every year with while other baseball greats are celebrating their induction rose comes to sell autographs and draws quite a crowd. Thank you so much, god bless you. Thank you. Sometimes it is the longest line in town. That still doesnt make the exile easy. I dont think people really understand and its probably my fault the way i played, but i got feelings. You know, i am sentimental like everybody else. You know, id rather be down there with the plaque on the wall, but i kind of screwed that up and i understand that and if the banks ever lifted ill be the happiest guy in the world but until then you just have to try to do what you can do. Meantime pete rose shows why they call him charlie rose. Most agree he was a great player but even pete rose admits he wasnt always a great man. He doesnt use the word sorry much except on the baseballs he signs which are inscribed with the words, i am sorry bet on baseball. Osgood next, a man behind the music. Im Robert De Niro and new york is my home. Its the best place to visit in the world and now its the easiest, because now there are new tourism guides on the road, and on your phone that make it easier to find the places you love. Find great dining, amazing history, and worldclass entertainment, no matter where you are. Take the ultimate road trip and see why i love new york. For more information, go to iloveny. Com osgood it happened this week. Tim hauser founder of the grammy winning vocal troupe the manhattan transfer died thursday of cardiac arrest. Hauser created the manhattan transfer in the late 1960s. With songs like boy from new york city and operator,. Operator. Manhattan transfer. A number of, they won a number of pop and jazz grammy awards. In 2010 hauser told our Michelle Miller that he just knew operator was going to be a big hit. When i played that record i said this is a hit record man so i just geeked it. I took it home. The manhattan transfer grew in popularity and even briefly had a variety show here on cbs. A representative says the manhattan transfer will continue to perform. Tim hauser was 72 years old. Coming up, a real hearttoheart. At the bottom in job creation. Massive cuts to education. And higher property taxes. Under governor corbett, pennsylvanias been heading in the wrong direction. Theres been no leadership and no vision. Thats gotta change. As your governor, i will lead. And well move pennsylvania forward. Well restore manufacturing jobs. Close Corporate Tax loopholes. And make the Gas Companies pay up to fund our schools. After all, its time to get pennsylvania moving again. In macarthurs world, he opposes new laws to ensure women receive equal pay for equal work. And macarthur opposes a womans right to choose backed by a group that would outlaw abortion even for rape and incest. For us in the real world, Aimee Belgard. Aimee will fight for equal pay and protect a womans right to choose. Aimee belgards on our side. Im Aimee Belgard and i approve this message. Osgood medicine can do wonders when it comes to saving lives but when it comes to making those lives worth living sometimes patients need a little more. Steve hartman now with an affair of the heart. In rochester, new york, at the university of rochesters strong memorial hospital, two heart transplant patients are shedding new light on the healing process. After they got their new hearts, 68yearold esther fitzrandolph and 68yearold danny pszczolkowski both suffered from complications and depression. Theyd all but given up. Oh, i didnt want to do anything. I would just sit around. I kind of refused the exercises and all that at times. But a few month ago, simultaneously, both these patients started really improving. Thats great. Cardiologist leway chen and the rest of the staff here were pleasantly con founded. We were confounded he is doing better thousand, i wonder why, he is more involved in his care, i wonder why. You knew why you were Getting Better . Yes. You were on something. Yes. I wanted to do more things. I wanted to walk. I wanted to ride a bike. So what was this miracle drug . What had they found that so dramatically accelerated their recoveries . Just each other. After their surgeries, danny and esther kept running into each other at followup appointments although she was twice divorced and not looking for another man and he was a committed lifelong bachelor they started dating, and healing. When your mind is in a better place, and your heart, then youre going to heal better. Dr. Chen says that is true. We are not talking about science anymore . Not science that we can put our finger on. He says there have been plenty of studies linking love and support to health and heart. This is just further proof. And for the happy couple, they are now enjoying life on carefree lane. Seriously, they moved in together on carefree lane. The lifelong bachelor now has flowered coffee mugs. This is even worse. Living with a woman will clearly take some getting used to. Its worse, not worst. But of course every medicine had its side effects and they say its well worth it. I recommend it to anybody. To survive, danny and esther both needed new hearts, but to truly live, they needed sweethearts too. May i have your attention please . Osgood danny aiellos many calls, just ahead. Poke know city, little creek. Osgood and later arcade fire for the record. Dont give me that look. You would think i am a criminal. Give me a hug. Just one. All right . I worry. All right . Feel better . Its sunday morning on cbs and here again is charles osgood. Osgood that is danny aiello playing opposite mia farrow in 1985 film the purple rose of cairo, this morning aiello is about to play a very different role, himself. Tracy smith is headed down for some questions and answers. Look, people are plea to do whatever they want to do. What free . What the hell are you talking about, free . The truth is danny aiello you are disturbing me may be sal plan fran, pizza joint owner in spike lees do the right thing. You come to sals there is no nono music, no rap, no music, no music, no music. Kapish . Have some dessert. No, i shouldnt. Will you marry me . What . Or moonstrucks johnny camarreri, engaged to cher, but devoted to his ailing mother. Loretta, i cant marry you. What . If i marry you, my mother will die. It turns out danny aiello himself doesnt know who he is. Thats one of many confessions in his new memoir published by krbs simon schuster, the title, i only know who i am when i am somebody else. What do you mean by that . I have no idea who i am, be but when i am a plague a character, i know exactly what i am going to say, who i am, where i came from and life is a lot easier like that. In a third decade career. Three winners already. Am i some kind of charity. He has played more than 90 different roles. But aiellos own story may be the most dramatic and revealing. It began in new york city. You started working here at what age . Nine years old. Nine . His father, in aiello, aiellos words, took a hike before he was born. So to help support his family, young danny became a virtuoso with a buffing rag at Grand Central terminal. I used to pop it like music. It was like jazz, pop, pop, pop i was greatly proud of that. And you had to pop it when you were with the soldiers because in 1942 i was doing a lot of gis. Just eight years later aiello joined the army himself, his athletic talent got him a coveted assignment playing baseball to entertain the troops. What did you do in the army . What did you do during the korean war . Well it was the korean war. I said i played bail. And you wanted to see combat. I wanted to see, but i didnt know what i was talking about. I was a tough kid and i felt this is where i belonged. But that tough kid found a soft spot when he came home to new york and met a girl named sandy cohen. And i was like hypnotized. She was the most beautiful thing. I swear to you that i had ever seen. Catholic aiello married jewish cohen in 1955. They went on to have three sons and a daughter. Wha what is the secret to beg married 60 years . Oh, dont talk to each other. No. I dont know. I really dont know. Its like we are so different too. We have nothing in common. But sandy aiello does agree with her husband on one point. She says he really doesnt know who he is. Do you know who danny aiello is . Oh, i know who he is. Who is he . He is a hard person to figure out. Hes not that easy. Hes hard. And hes very deep. Go get them, baby. Bingo. When their relationship began, danny was a hustler. Who pocketed other peoples money playing pool. There are some people that come in with a lot of money. They are just damned stupid. They want to spend their money. They come in and they want to be beat. But as his family grew, aiello needed a steady paycheck, so he decided to go greyhound. Is this what you used to do. Yes, when i was a baggage man thats what i did. Aiello spent ten years there, first as a baggage handler. One of my fans, remember. Later. May i have your attention please. As the bus stations public address announcer. Platform 3 a coach for philadelphia, chester, wilmington, dover, seaford. The stopped are still burned in his memory. Chester, wilmington, dover, seaford, laurel, salisbury, princess ann. Buffalo platform number three, ladies and gentlemen. Have a good trip. This is danny aiello saying sayonara. Those are all leaving town. Aiello was also a union leader and after he was fired following an unauthorized strike he worried his family would go hungry, so he turned to crime and safe cracking. We threw the safe out the window, and if it broke in the back with regard then we went in and got whatever was there. But you never got caught . Never got caught. Did you think at the time, i am a criminal . Yeah, i thought i was disgusting. Eventually aiello landed a job as a bouncer at the improvisation comedy club. He got to fill in as emcee and found he had a mac for performing. So at the age of 36, he started acting. Three years later he got his first movie, bang the drum slowly with Robert De Niro whose acting talent far outweighed his baseball skills. He couldnt throw the ball so we worked and worked and what came outlet me tell you how great he was. Great parts kept coming, and in 1990 aiello got an oscar nomination for best supporting actor in do the right thing. I am sure most of them dont like us but some of them do. I mean for christ steaks they grew up on my food, on my fooled. He didnt win and says he doesnt think he should have. It cheap penned the award. I said if i got got it how good could it be . You really believed that . Gods truth. Why . Danny aiello . Come on. Backed into acting. Never studied a day in his life. I am not being cool here. I am telling you straight dope. Nevertheless two of aiellos sons went into the business. Rick is an actor and danny the third was known throughout the i have as a great stunt man. In fort apache the bronx, when you cant see dan think, its his son throwing the pumps. But at age 52 danny the third was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. He died in 2010. Everything in me was empty. There was there wasnt a human i didnt feel anything. I was completely numb. Look, joy, these are tough times for me. Aiello says he found comfort in work, acting and more recently singing too. Besame, besame mucho. Still at 81, he cant help thinking about his own mortality. If death comes, it comes. And it will some day. How i am going deal with it, i dont know. Hopefully good. But i dont like airplanes. A lot of people say, well are you afraid . No what bothers me when i get in an airplane is that didnt say to those that i love, that i didnt hug each one of them and say i loved you before i went. Because i would hate to think i died and and they didnt hear my last words. Thats why i hate to fly. Which brings us to his jaguar. Back in the 90s when danny did a have with madonna, she taught him a little trick, listen to yourself in your car. Hes done it ever since. Any time i am working on a character, i do it in my car. In your car . Any time i need to memorize hines, i am in my car. When i am arranging music, that i am going to sing in my albums i arrange it in the car. And its here in his car that he can just be can danny aiello, whoever that is. Because i dont know who i am when i am somebody else. Thats it wow. Osgood next. Ben stein on the ultimate price. Henning,. Osgood in New Hampshire yesterday, mourners gathered on what would have been james foleys 41st birthday to remember the american journalist beheaded by isis militants in syria. How our government deals with these brutal acts is the subject of our commentary, contributor ben stein. Could anything be worse than being made to neal in the kneel in the sand, read a slammedder against your own country and then have a psychotic killer slowly cut your head off with a fairly small knife . You are all alone in the desert, in unspeakable fear and pain. As most of us know this is what recently happened to two americans, Steven Sotloff and james foley, both journalists at the hands of the horrifyingly cruel terror group, the socalled islamic state. The same horrific fate happened to two british aid workers, david haines and alan henning kidnapped recently by isis. According to news reports which could be wrong, part of the reason isis did these cruel acts was because the governments of the usa and the United Kingdom refused to pay ran on the to the terrorists as the kidnappers. The reason . The u. S. Does not may ransom to terrorists same goes for the uk this sounds fine and highminded if you are sitting in a comfy office in the white house or on downing street. But maybe its just cruel and foolish itself. Why dont we pay ransom. France apparently pays ransom. The germans whom we dont think of as softies pay ransom, what is so great about not paying ransom. We paid an immense ransom for the release of u. S. Army sergeant bow per gal from the taliban recently when we exchanged him for five high value terrorists being kept at guantanamo. From what oners that, Oil Companies routinely pay bribes to keep their pipelines running. In the iraq war we bribed local sheiks with planeloads of money to be on our side. Look, not paying ransom has a nice ring to it. But its not going to beat isis. Its not going to 0 stop the allure of a fundamentalist murderous movement to stick minds. Instead it means that a fellow human who was not a spy or an assassin who was maybe just trying to help inform people or save peoples lives dies an excruciating lonely death and no one is any better off for it. These men dont deserve to die this way. If they can be ransomed lets do it. We have plenty of money. The fed just prints it. Maybe mr. Obama can make himself look tough some other way. The u. S. Is far too big to be made small by paying out money to save those we love from grew some moneyly murders on. Osgood arcade fire. Next. On 0 our sunday morning calendar. On monday, an exhibition of 79 cubist works of art donated by cosmetics tycoon Leonard Lauder opens at new yorks metropolitan museum. Tuesday sees the release of hope the latest album by british talent show sensation susan boyle. On wednesday the National Weather service implements changes in its Severe Weather outlooks. Objective, to better communicate the likelihood of storms. Thursday sees the opening of the state fair of louisiana in shreveport, featuring livestock competitions, amusement rides, live music and plenty of food. Speaking of food, friday is national bologna day, a day for celebrating 800 millions pounds of the luncheon meat americans reportedly eat etch re eat every year. Ment and on saturday, the rock and roll hall of fame in cleveland honors the Everly Brothers with a live concert. Don everly will accept the halls annual Music Masters award on behalf of himself and his brother phil, who died in january. Osgood sunday morning, sunday afternoon. On the smithsonian channel. Osgood introducing arcade fire, a very hot rock band from canada that many of our audience outside of the devoted following here may still not have heard of. This morning, the band talks with our Anthony Mason. Few new rock groups can fill a big arena like brooklyns barclays center, but this band can. Theyve won a grammy and charted two number one albums. If you havent yet made their acquaintance, this is arcade fire. I feel like we are just constantly in a posture of introducing ourselves. I feel like weve been introducing ourselves for like 15 years. Oh, we are from montreal, we do this, we do that. I wonder when we wont have to do that. Nice to meet you. Time magazine in canada has called them the countrys most intriguing rock band. David bowie is a fan and has joined them on stage. They have played with mick jagger on saturday night live. On tour, the core six members add strings, horns, and haitian percussion, creating a sound both epic and operatic. What one critic called a cross between a clash concert and cirque du soleil. For me, its like i believe in the songs so much, i just want to make sure that the spirit of the song comes out. Regine spas chassagne and win butler, husband and wife and the bands principal stopping writers met at Macgill University in montreal in 2001. I had nothing going on and she had lots of stuff going on. She was playing in a medieval band in shopping malls. I also stang jazz in afros i are store opening, which was pretty funny, at 8 00 a. M. They moved in together in the mile end section. I first saw this building, and regene was living around the corner and it was a bar. And i saw the for rent sign and figured you could make noise because it was above a bar. So how long did you actually live here. Five years, six years, right. Their apartment would become their Performance Space and their recording studio. Did the neighbors down stair complains. Ha . That first album, funeral, recorded for less than 10,000, has gone on to sell more than 700,000 copies. And how did you actually find this place . Arcade fire started playing small venues around montreal, like the Ukrainian Federation hall, win brought his brother will into the group, brother jeremy gara and richard r. Eed parry. And i met you you put like an ad on a telephone pole for a roommate. And he was like, i have this great place. We can make a lot of noise and i was like i was hooked. When kingsbury joined the band i wasnt really anticipating making, like doing this to this extent. You didnt think this was going to work . No. Also a surprise the grammy goes to the suburbs their grammy in 2011 for album of the year. They beat out eminem f katie ferry and lady gaga. I just want to say thank you to montreal, quebec for taking us and giving us a home,. The band members, all multiinstrumentalist are all canadian except win and will, who grew up in texas. Their grandmother was a member of the sinning king family. Their grandfather was the big band leader alvino rey. Just like my grandpa alvinos shirt i am wearing today. With your you influenced by him. Well he bought me my first guitar. Regene, the daughter of haitian immigrants was a musical prodigy. Prodigy. I didnt have a lot of access to music so when i heard something i would just kind of listen to it like it was going to go away. Because it was like it was and i was never going to hear it again. So i just learned to remember everything. Were you able to do that . Yeah. She play pretty much anything shshes ever heard. Are you hearing music in your head all the time. Kind of. Maybe its not normal but i hear so much music in my head sometimes so clearly that it might as well be real. During the recording of their second album, neon bible, she remembers i woke up with a crazy headache. So my head was like about to explode, and i tried to remember what i was dreaming about. And i realized i was playing black mirror backwards in my head with the melody backwards and the beat and i was trying to make it work. That is pretty scary though to wake up hearing a song backwards in your head. It took so much brain power to do this. Its like my head was heating up, you know. Like the computer was why am i doing this . Because i wanted to make sure that i knew it like backwards and forwards. So i could play it backwards. The band easels been influenced by regenes heritage. Youve made haiti a big part of the conversation for this band. Yes. Well it was already such a big important part of our lives and then the earthquake happened. It was 2010 and the group rushed out on tour to raise a Million Dollars for the relief effort. We had a Super Bowl Ad. It is like what is in the inbox that we would have to say no to. And we were like all right, what does it pay . Yes, tell them to double it. So you did that Super Bowl Ad entirely to raise money for haiti. Entirely, yeah. After four albums and more than a decade together, arcade fire remains a tight family. We have never had drugs in our band, you know, theres a lot of pitfalls. We have all read the rockaby okay fits. Biographies. You learn your lessons from that . In fact, i have been so boring i have no interest in that, in fact, i find it embarrassing embarrassing . I find it embarrassing. Why do you find it embarrassing . It is like seeing a drunk santa claus or Something Like that. I dont think it is cool. For arcade fire the music is the thing. They turn sound into spectacle. When you push something to where its about to break, you know thats how we play, for better or for worse thats kind of how we play. Just try to transcend the confines of wherever youre at. Its always kind of punk to do that, just be like something else. Correspondent Anthony Mason with the group arcade fire. Now to Bob Schieffer in washington for a look at what is ahead on face the nation. Good morning, bob. Good morning, charles. Well, we are talking about fighting ebola and fighting fear, we will talk to dr. Anthony fauci of the National Institute of health and the people on the front lines fighting this insidious disease. Osgood thank you, Bob Schieffer, we will be watching. And next week, here on sunday morning trick or treat . A new look at a new calling for bradley trick or treat . A new look at a new calling for bradley cooper. We leave you this sunday morning among the autumn leaves of New Hampshire. I am charles osgood, please join us again next sunday morning. Until then, i will see you on the radio. And its working its magic once again. The first place. Here it means more than lines or pictures on a page. Its a way of life. Its music and color. The more we give in to the magic of this place, the more wed like to stay. Oaxaca. Live it to believe it