Honors Program alumna is La Salle’s inaugural Women in Leadership Award

Sallyanne Harper, ’76, is a leader in the enterprise risk management field.

Sallyanne Harper, ’76, remembers the call. She doesn’t think she will ever forget it, actually.

An agency sought Harper’s help. It needed to find $8 billion that had gone unaccounted for in its financial system. Harper’s MBA is in finance and investment, not financial management. She feared she wasn’t an appropriate fit for the role.

She took the job anyway, in one of those sink-or-swim career moments. She set up an entire office in no time, surrounding herself with talented colleagues who fit the roll-up-your-sleeves mold.

“I had a dear friend who said I built my career on disasters, and I think it’s true,” Harper said. “What I learned is there are always people at the beginning of a project who are willing to wave the flag and help, and those at the end willing to take the victory lap. You need to find the people in the middle—cajoling and pushing through, even when you’re learning the ropes yourself.”

Sallyanne Harper, ’76Moments like this have epitomized Harper’s career. She was the inaugural recipient of La Salle University’s Women in Leadership Award. The award, conveyed at an April 16 virtual ceremony, is to be awarded annually to an alumna who melds career distinction and community engagement, with Lasallian values in her personal and professional life.

La Salle’s Alumni Career Committee, chaired by Joe Markmann, Ph.D., MBA ’06, ’96, pored over 40 nominations for the Women in Leadership Award, said Trey Ulrich, ’99, MBA ’02, La Salle’s senior director of alumni engagement and annual giving.

“Sallyanne’s nomination rose to the top,” Ulrich said. “Her personal and professional accomplishments fully exemplify the employment of Lasallian virtues and values. In recognizing her life-long achievements, we are demonstrating to current and future La Salle students the great opportunities that they can achieve with a La Salle education rooted in the core values of faith, service, and community.”

Today, Harper’s distinguished career continues as an adjunct professor at Brookings Executive Education. She’s also an independent board member for the Federal Accounting Standards Advisory Board. Previously, Harper was the chief financial officer for the Environmental Protection Agency, among other roles and career destinations.

Harper’s professional journey began at La Salle, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in psychology in 1976 and, later, an honorary doctorate of humane letters.

She grew up in Philadelphia’s Roxborough neighborhood, where she was one of six children—including five daughters—born to a La Salle graduate (Thomas B. Harper, III, ’48) and a Chestnut Hill College graduate (Frances McCarron Harper). It was assumed, she said, that she would attend Chestnut Hill—just as her mother and older sister, Patricia Harper Petrozza, had.

“I wanted for once in my life to be somewhere where I wasn’t ‘one of the Harper girls,’” she said. “Being sandwiched between my sisters, who are brilliant, was difficult.”

Harper wanted to cast a wide geographic net when initiating her college search. Her parents, she recalled, placed a dinner plate over a map and drew a large circle around Philadelphia, denoting their permissible search parameters. That narrowed her search considerably.

“I am so glad I chose La Salle,” Harper said. “It made me.”

Her time at La Salle overlapped with some of the first classes of female students being admitted to the University’s undergraduate day program. Federal legislation known as Title IX passed in 1972. La Salle hired its first female athletic director and established a women’s center on campus the same year—creating further opportunities for the University’s female students, she recalled.

Above all, she said, the La Salle Honors Program shaped her.

“Nowhere else have I ever found that amount of dedication to student development,” said Harper, whose husband Francis J. Nathans Jr., ’78, is also a La Salle alumnus. “The time spent by professors in the classroom and in the moderation of extra-curricular activities, that was special to La Salle.”

Harper’s experience at La Salle inspired her sisters Kate, ’78, and Beth, ’80, to enroll at 20th and Olney, as did their brother Tom, ’84.

“My mother never forgave me for my sisters following me there,” Harper said with a laugh, “but it was a unique opportunity to learn in such a rich environment. I met a diverse group of people—from every race and nationality, and from across the country. I am forever grateful to La Salle.”

—Christopher A. Vito

More Feature Articles

Class Notes

John J. McCann, ’52 and his wife, Margaret A. McCann, celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary on Sept. 1, 2022....

read more

In Memoriam

James F. Kelly, '49Edward J. Stemmler, M.D., '50Br. John Herron, FSC, '51Edward J. Gallagher, '51Nicholas A....

read more