Ketzef, Dov)
Son of Aryeh and Leah. He was born on September 22, 1947 in Hadera and studied at the Be’eri School and the Tchernichovsky High School in Netanya, where he was a member of the Hanoar Haoved Vehalomed movement and his friends. To love the country and its landscapes and to be a devoted son to his homeland, and successfully completed a training course in artillery training, and in the framework of the school and Gadna he participated in national competitions in shooting and won great achievements. He was also a guide to Gadna’s travels around the country, and he used his hobby to make paper airplanes made of paper and plastic materials, and he preferred the paper models to the challenge and difficulty of doing so, which he inherited from his older brother. He graduated from the Hebrew University of Haifa where he completed his studies as an engineer. To the choir of the Technion and participated in most of its performances After completing his studies at the Technion, he continued to study for his master’s degree at Tel Aviv University, where he was a nobleman and his main characteristics were revealed in several ways: his love for his family was strong, his manner with his parents was polite and respectful; He was friendly with all those around him, and even when they disagreed, he tried to convince them calmly and confidently, without raising his voice, and his help to the friends was spontaneous and natural and his speech was quiet, courteous, and moderate. Others loved him. He excelled not only in kindness, but also in faith in his friends. Dov was drafted into the IDF in early September 1965 and reached the rank of second lieutenant. He died and was brought to eternal rest in the military cemetery in Netanya. “When I first got acquainted with him,” wrote one of his teachers at the Technion, “he drew my attention and if he missed one of my lessons, I immediately noticed it. When he chose to carry out both a project and a laboratory for me, so I knew him in all his intellectual and analytical abilities. After his death, a booklet was published in his memory bearing the name “Dubi”.