 Appalachian Wireless proudly brings you unlimited data. Unlimited data is only $80 a month for a single line. Four lines as low as $200. Better service, bigger savings. That's today's Appalachian Wireless. An East Kentucky network company. Get a speed slow to 25 gigabytes per line to 512 kilobits for phones and tablets. And 15 gigabytes for motors. See store for more details. The temperature had barely top 20 degrees, but that didn't stop those wanting to march in remembrance of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. He had a vision not for his children, but for all children. And not just for African-Americans, but for everyone that had that freedom because it's not just a black thing. It's a people thing. You know, we need unity and togetherness for everyone. Several excerpts from Dr. King's speeches were read before the march reached the Pikeville United Methodist Church, where Dr. Matissa Wilburn was the keynote speaker. Dr. King's message of love and community and that we're all equal will continue to go on because in our humanity we continue to grapple with issues of injustice. Dr. Wilburn, who is originally from Hazard, said that she welcomed the opportunity to return to Eastern Kentucky to help carry on Dr. King's message of unity. To create the community that we all want to live in, we've got to be in it together. And I think that message that no matter what love will help bring that community together and help us all be better. But the highlight of the event was Reverend Justin Preston's reciting of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s famous, I Have a Dream, speech. Little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls as sisters and brothers. I have a dream today. Today was the third year of the Unity march in Pikeville sponsored by Big Sandy Community and Technical College and the University of Pikeville. In Pikeville, I'm Shannon Deskins, EKB News.