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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1973)
r Service counsels addicts, alcoholics Newsprint shortage pressures college papers By Steve Arvanette The newsprint shortage which has been plaguing the nation's newspapers appears to be affecting several college publications in the Midwest. However, a spokesman for Arbor Printing Co., printer for the Daily Nebraskan, said the firm expects no problem supplying sufficient newsprint for the first semester. Zean Carney, owner of Arbor, said he received 12 rolls of newsprint Wednesday which boosted his reserves to 35,000 pounds. Ideally, Arbor likes to have 50,000 pounds of newsprint in stock, he said. About 65 per cent of all newsprint used in the United States is imported from Canada. Canadian production has been seriously reduced because of a series of paper mill strikes. A strike by Canadian rail workers cut all newsprint deliveries out of the country until Parliament ordered them back to work. "Those 12 rolls were sitting in a train in Canada for over a month," Carney said. An additional 50,000 pounds should be loaded on a train car for Lincoln but could be held up in a paper mill still on strike, he said. Carney said his most recent shipment should insure sufficient newsprint for the Daily Nebraskan into December, He said a 12-pago paper requires 1,300 pounds of newsprint. The Kansas State Collogian appears in more immediate trouble, however. Bill Brown, director of student publications, said the printer has only a three week supply of newsprint. The problem is that their next shipment is expected to fx; three weeks late, he said. A spokesman for the Iowa State Daily said the paper has not experienced any shortages yet. The paper's printer has said his newsprint allotment might be cut by as much as 20 per cent later in the year. Should that happen, the Iowa State Daily might try a smaller type size and cut the number of pages. The University of Missouri friday, September 21, 1973 By Tarn Mehuron The new outpatient service Lincoln General Hospital's Dependency Unit is doincj w;l coning to Du3nc Engle, outpatient counselor. Established in Juno, the servici h :.)(; I gncd to help people with nonadvanced cases of alcoholism and drug addiction cope with their problem?. More people are willing to com.- 10 th; outpatient program because they see it as li;:. thieatenmg to them than the inpatient service, Engle said Mo.i people participating in the inpatient program are them because uf a medical problem or because of a crisis with their fuiniiy or the law. "People whose disease is caught early and who show good motivation are doing well if. the outpatient service," Engle said, but for those "well along ' in xhe disease the now program does little good. These are mfened to the more intense inpatient service. if few Maneater has not had to cut back on the size of its paper. They were forced to change printing companies earlier ir, the year when their origiru;! printei ran out of newsprint. Larry Hall, business manager for the Colorado Daily at the University of Colorado, said that paper is attempting to conserve tm 11 a r 74. mi r '.r raw . v 18. las "The Bost Comcuh; of All Time" International Film Critics' Poll c:iif.iMjiiiiM:iB:Lm.iiJM9g warn a .' vs,V' with s)(!cinl invisii ni score niid nnmilion by Ch.'iiJrs Chnplin aiul Vor firsi limo in ; us PAY IMY with Charlie and Sydney Chaplin September ? 1 f1 September ?.? - ,'t, 7 & '' Admission: Studen's $1 Won Students $1.50 Series Tickets Av.-i'i;tl-! .t btscount Rate an. rUv p't :riAtti i Jto rvv, fir y 11 stt..x. 1 attempting to cut their 16,000 copy press run to 15,000. Hail .did the paper was ioi tiimiio iheir printer signed a tv.o-yivn contract with a ii: '. sjnnt supplier. He added ttvit they arc using a lighter ir.-ide of paper this fall. The edit'jr of the Daily newsprint. He said they pre I 1' M" i fke$lJ J (II V'ivv,t of i-iv. 14 narticipants in the new program are young, Mhnucjh th:y nry in frcm 22 to 50, Engle said. Englo said that an unmii ; ;roect of the program is ihat it up.dr.r.fod :i- vl'v-. .r.i -i."i;.s of dv ,-,s !-.;. ' The spouse has 'he seme things to learn as the patitnt and is involved in th-: trentmrnt wish him," Epqle sa;d. The treatme; t for drug addiction is tm snirs as for alcoholism, sh? counselor explained. "Most people aie chemically interdependent, and usa dri'gs as weli js alcohci," Engle :.aid. Me said two oi tin? 14 participants h?,"e used drugs. One v.'s on speed, the other was taking tranquilizers, and both drink, he added. Participants meet three times a week for six to rra months. A lecture is presented once a week, usually given by .Alcoholics Anonymous f AA) member, he said. The second r voting consists of group therapy, in which the patients tiy to identify their feelings, and how these feelings are covered up Vy'vciilous defense mechanisms, he said. Individu and family counseling make up the third mootino. Englo viir' he first tries to alternate counsel!) ? sessions b-ivw.-er; the patient and the spouse, then cctinre!" them tos-jelher. f!r v;id he eventually hoped to bring i,i V. j participa.-.u' cm'Uirun to the counseling meetings. "Children suffer as much as the spouse does, and hopefully this will help them too," Enqle Mid. After ihree months of treatment the participants are evaluated by Engle. If there is little or no improvement, the patient is trnen va to the inpatient program. Engle is !h: only counselor on the program, but he-says he'll be get ring h-jip if the group gets larger than 25. The AA orienteci program will be on a trial basis for probably a vear, he sid. with reenter hospital o,pltiation;. Rut iiith tho i , lowan ai me U-.lveisity of Iowa idid hir, panel has had no shortage nroi'fim. It) jvfv , cr ... rtU' A - l '.til1 tf 1 CI AKK CAULK MMI.N XM IJ'SLIK HOWARD ! OLIVIA del I AVI LLANI) -i I If A n e.-ch "We have not been limited in any matter," Lewis Dvcrkm said. ' t V ' v F1 Winner of Ten (I Awards. ' I i M C, u.i Ml IHtl (101 WfN MAYfR ne nt nutmtn nv ! i V ili : r'-i i .t ,( i f.ii '.'I IMn .ili H p.-,c;o 9 .poUM. t.i 5