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PASSINGS: Ken Iman, Luis Garcia Berlanga, Chris Gulker, Linda Dozoretz

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Ken Iman

NFL lineman played 10 seasons for Rams

Ken Iman, 71, an offensive lineman who played 10 seasons for the Los Angeles Rams, died Saturday at his home in Springfield, Pa., the Philadelphia Eagles announced. He had worked for the team an assistant coach and sales executive. No cause was given.

Iman joined the Rams in 1964 from the Green Bay Packers in a trade for quarterback Zeke Bratkowski. He missed that season because of a broken ankle but became a fixture with the Rams beginning in 1965, starting at center in 140 consecutive games.

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He was traded to the St. Louis Cardinals in 1975 but retired.

Kenneth Charles Iman was born Feb. 8, 1939 in St. Louis and graduated from Southeast Missouri State University. He signed with the Packers as a free agent and played there from 1960-64, appearing in three consecutive NFL championship games.

Iman was an offensive line coach with the Eagles from 1976-86.

Luis Garcia Berlanga

Spanish filmmaker was critical of Franco

Luis Garcia Berlanga, 89, a Spanish filmmaker who was critical of the military dictatorship under Gen. Francisco Franco and was credited with helping to revive the country’s movie industry after its civil war, died Saturday at his home in Madrid, according to Spain’s film academy. He had Alzheimer’s disease

Berlanga wrote and directed his first short in 1948 and in 1951 made his first feature film, “Esa Pareja Feliz” (That Happy Couple), in collaboration with Juan Antonio Bardem.

Berlanga’s 1952 film “Bienvenido, Mister Marshall” (Welcome, Mr. Marshall) explored Spain’s hopes that the United States would help the country restore democracy and prosperity as it had in much of Europe after World War II.

His 1961 film “Placido” was nominated for the Academy Award for best foreign language film. Berlanga was born July 12, 1921, in Valencia, Spain.

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Chris Gulker

Longtime California journalist, early blogger

Chris Gulker, 59, a longtime journalist who was among the first to embrace the possibilities of digital publishing, died Oct. 27 of brain cancer at his home in Menlo Park, Calif., his family said.

Gulker was a photographer at the Los Angeles Herald Examiner and a photo editor at the San Francisco Examiner. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, Gulker co-founded the Gate, the original online version of the Chronicle and Examiner when the papers had a joint operating agreement. Gulker also was an early blogger. He wrote about his cancer on his blog and dictated his last post in October.

Born March 10, 1951, Gulker also worked for Apple Computer and Adobe Systems, wrote a technology column for the Independent of London and founded a local website, InMenlo, with his wife, Linda.

Linda Dozoretz, a well-respected Hollywood publicist whose clients over a long career included Doris Day, Burt Bacharach, Rosemary Clooney and Candy Spelling, died Tuesday in Los Angeles after battling cancer and heart problems. Dozoretz, who worked under legendary publicists Warren Cowan and Henry Rogers at Rogers & Cowan and also did crisis public relations work for the firms Ruder-Finn and Guttman & Pratt, was 62.

Times staff and wire reports

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news.obits@latimes.com

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