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| - As Vogel walked around the cabin, inspecting the passengers, Jones re-entered and began requesting tickets from the passengers. When Vogel pulled down the newspaper that Henry Jones, Sr. was using to hide behind, Indiana slid up next to Vogel and asked for his ticket. After Vogel turned to face the ticket taker, he was surprised to see Jones. Jones quickly punched Vogel and tossed him out of the open window, into a pile of luggage. Facing the crowd, he explained that the SS Officer didn't have a ticket. Alarmed, all the passengers immediately began waving their tickets to ensure that they did not meet a similar fate. Outside, in the pile of luggage, Vogel stood up and cursed in German as the zeppelin took off.
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abstract
| - As Vogel walked around the cabin, inspecting the passengers, Jones re-entered and began requesting tickets from the passengers. When Vogel pulled down the newspaper that Henry Jones, Sr. was using to hide behind, Indiana slid up next to Vogel and asked for his ticket. After Vogel turned to face the ticket taker, he was surprised to see Jones. Jones quickly punched Vogel and tossed him out of the open window, into a pile of luggage. Facing the crowd, he explained that the SS Officer didn't have a ticket. Alarmed, all the passengers immediately began waving their tickets to ensure that they did not meet a similar fate. Outside, in the pile of luggage, Vogel stood up and cursed in German as the zeppelin took off. The zeppelin took off, and Indiana sabotaged the ship's radio system. Back in his adventuring clothes, sat with his father in the main cabin, having a drink and trying to reconcile their differences. As they discussed the tests awaiting the discoverer of the Holy Grail, the younger Jones realized that the ship was turning around, heading back to Germany. Needing to escape, the two set off to steal one of D-138's biplanes.. An agent of the Gestapo found another passenger, a World War One Ace aboard, and they tried unsuccessfully to use the other biplane, but both perished. Indiana Jones kept the flight coupons for himself and his father (under their aliases of J. Schotte and H. Widerstand) in his journal.
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