<Li> For Janice and Kenneth to Voyage </Li> <P> The book, and references to it, are seen on several occasions in Season 2 of the AMC television drama Mad Men . </P> <Ul> <Li> In the season's first episode, "For Those Who Think Young," the book is read by an unknown character in a bar and later by the show's main character, Don Draper . At the conclusion of the episode, a passage from the fourth section of the poem "Mayakovsky" is read as Draper inscribes the book to a then - unknown recipient with the message, "Made me think of you - D", and subsequently places the book in an envelope and drops it in the mailbox . </Li> <Li> In the season's 12th episode, "The Mountain King", Draper, visiting California on business, visits Anna Draper and finds the book he sent on her bookshelf--revealing that she was the previously unknown recipient . </Li> <Li> Episode 13, "Meditations in an Emergency", is set at the time of the Cuban Missile Crisis and takes its title directly from O'Hara's book . </Li> </Ul> <Li> In the season's first episode, "For Those Who Think Young," the book is read by an unknown character in a bar and later by the show's main character, Don Draper . At the conclusion of the episode, a passage from the fourth section of the poem "Mayakovsky" is read as Draper inscribes the book to a then - unknown recipient with the message, "Made me think of you - D", and subsequently places the book in an envelope and drops it in the mailbox . </Li>

Who did don mail meditations in an emergency to