The Address
"It had been almost two years since President Roosevelt’s death, but Americans were still unaccustomed to Truman, and a voice variously described as 'flat,' or 'Midwestern,' or 'nasal,' or 'clipped'....Parts of the speech got a standing ovation, but the applause was far from universal. [Some] wondered why the United States should pick up after the British. World leadership had a nice ring, but apart from the glory of it all, there were practical drawbacks—strategic and economic...."