Having represented broadcasters through the decade of the 40s, Haley became one himself. In June 1947, the FCC granted him a construction permit to build a new Class A
FM station at
Pasadena, California, to operate on 98.3 megaHertz (megacycles, at the time), with 420 watts effective radiated power. The station was issued the call sign
KAGH, an obvious allusion to Haley’s initials. KAGH went on the air June 15, 1947. It scheduled a "formal opening" on August 20, at the
Pasadena Civic Auditorium, anticipating an expected attendance of more than 3,000 persons, with movies, speeches by government officials, Hollywood entertainers, and a dance following the show. A full-page advertisement in
Broadcasting-Telecasting Magazine titled "Editorial: KAGH's Report to the Industry on FM in Los Angeles County", reported that every seat in the venue was taken, "and hundreds listened in the Gold Room and other hundreds were turned away." In October 1947, the FCC granted Haley a construction permit to build a new
AM station at Pasadena, to operate on 1300 kiloHertz (then, kilocycles), with transmitter power of one kilowatt. It inherited the KAGH call sign. In 1949 the FM station call sign was changed to KARS. Haley sold the stations that year. ==Aerojet==