After finishing college, Salmon was appointed a teacher at
Portsmouth College but could not continue for long. When her husband William Pickles was appointed a lecturer at the
London School of Economics (LSE), they shifted to the city. Here Dorothy enrolled for a B.Sc. in
Political Science from LSE. During
World War II, she published pamphlets with her husband and was appointed in the French division of
Ministry of Information, which handled information to and from the
French Resistance. Pickles was involved in British politics as well, and contested the
1950 general election as the Labour candidate for
Finchley, but lost to
Conservative John Crowder by 12,579 votes. The Pickles maintained close connections with leaders of the
Socialist International and acted as translators during some of its meetings. She, for the year 1960, was a visiting professor at the
Columbia University. Pickles authored a dozen books which were translated to Dutch, Spanish, Arabic, Greek, and Hindi languages, while also being a contributor to multiple academic journals. ==Personal life==