San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Lewis F. Petrinovic­h

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Lewis Franklin Petrinovic­h passed away July 28 at his home in Berkeley. He was 91.

Born in Wallace, Idaho, he was the only child of Croatian immigrant John F. Petrinovic­h, a hard rock miner and later furniture store owner, and Ollie Steward Petrinovic­h, a descendant of Scottish immigrants.

His youth was spent wrangling horses, playing football, boxing, and learning to play the saxophone. He entered the University of Idaho, graduating in 1952. While he continued his education, he helped support his family with pickup nighttime jazz gigs playing the string bass and baritone saxophone.

A decade later, in 1962, he received the Ph.D. in psychology from UC Berkeley and began his academic career as an assistant professor at San Francisco State College (now University). Moving to the State University of New York at Stony Brook, he advanced from associate professor to professor.

In 1968, he joined the faculty of the University of California Riverside, where he spent most of this academic career as professor and chair of the Department of Psychology. He retired from UC Riverside as professor emeritus in 1991.

His interest in music continued throughout his life. Until recently, he played baritone sax in the Alamedabas­ed Bob Enos Legacy Big Band, a jazz group who entertaine­d at the Alameda restaurant­s Rooster’s Roadhouse and Jim’s on the Course. He also served on the board of directors of Friends of Big Band Jazz from 2001 to 2007.

His standing as a gourmet was well known and appreciate­d among his friends. Donning his chef’s jacket embroidere­d “Chez Lew,” he entertaine­d with sumptuous meals at holidays and birthdays.

His academic research, much of it in evolutiona­ry psychology, took in topics as varied as left-handedness, the evolutiona­ry origins of cannibalis­m, elephant seal

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