Like most nouns, 'newspaper' can be either countable or uncountable, depending on the meaning intended.
For example, if you say 'I bought a newspaper' you are talking about a single object , so it is countable. But if you say 'Put some newspaper inside your wet shoes and they'll be dry by morning' you are thinking of newspaper as a material or substance, so it's uncountable.
The same goes for ice cream. If you ask for 'an ice cream' you are imagining a single object - probably in a cone, and this is countable - one ice cream, two ice creams, three ice creams. But if you're at home, or in a restaurant, where you'd have a few spoonfuls of ice cream in a bowl , then you'd probably say 'some ice cream'. In this case, it is uncountable because you are referring to a certain amount of a substance, as opposed to an individual item.