With only a high school education, Kerby was "regarded as highly self-educated and extremely bright".
Otis Chandler said to Kerby when he won the Pulitzer, "You have raised the intellectual level of this newspaper". His specialty was criminal justice, governmental censorship, and secrecy.[1][2]
Kirby began his journalism career as a reporter for the Pueblo Star-Journal Chieftain, then he became an
editorial writer until 1942.[5] He moved to radio, joining
KGHF in 1947, where he won an award as an outstanding radio journalist. In 1948, Kirby became the editor of Rocky Mountain Life, then the editor at Frontier Magazine, then the associate editor of
The Nation. He joined the Los Angeles Times as senior editorial writer in 1971.[6]
Awards
Kirby received the
Denver Press Club Award as an outstanding radio journalist in 1947. He won the Pulitzer Prize in the "Editorial Writing" category in 1976 for "articles against government secrecy and judicial censorship". He received the Public Service award from the
State Bar of California in 1983.[7][8]