 Ever heard the old phrase strike when the iron is hot? Well, it's never been hotter than now. All this month at Appalachian Wireless, you can get the Samsung GS6 or the GS6 Edge for just one penny when you send them for service. The Galaxy S6, normally $49.99, now just a penny. The Galaxy S6 Edge, normally $99.99, now just a penny. Strike Now will supplies last. Better service, bigger savings, serving you for the last 25 years at Appalachian Wireless. On Saturday, September 17th, in Louisville, an all-star group of honorees will receive this year's Muhammad Ali Humanitarian Awards, and among them will be Floyd County Attorney John Rosenberg, the founding director of the Appalachian Research and Defense Fund of Kentucky, better known as Apple Red. Rosenberg is being honored for his work as a tireless advocate for the poor and disadvantaged in our region, and looking back, Rosenberg says it only took one visit to the area back in 1970 to realize he wanted to stay. And we thought about it and decided it would be interesting and would be a worthwhile thing to do, to be here for a few years and try to provide first-class legal services to people who couldn't afford it. Over the years, Rosenberg has helped eastern Kentuckians fight thousands of legal battles at no cost, even taking on coal companies for abusive land practices and fighting for black lung benefits. I think that it's very important for low-income people and the poor to have representation in some of these issues to ensure that their quality of life is better and they have access to the services that they need. With the recent decline of the coal industry, Rosenberg and his network of attorneys are still busy representing clients, but the types of challenges they see are changing. We have a lot of people who are out of work, we have a lot of situations that are really difficult as minds have closed and economically, no matter how you feel about it environmentally or how you feel about mining, nobody wants to see somebody out of work. Rosenberg, who is now in his 80s, still works on cases and continues his mission to recruit other attorneys from across the country to work for eastern Kentuckians at no cost to fight battles close to his heart, and he says he has no intentions of giving it up. I don't feel like I'm going to quit anytime soon, heading for 85, so I'm not exactly a youngster but I don't know that I feel either that age or feel like I need to stop. Rosenberg will receive the Muhammad Ali Kentucky Humanitarian Award during the fourth annual award ceremony in Louisville Saturday night. Reporting in Prestonsburg for EKB News, I'm Shannon Deskins.