<P> Hyderabadi cuisine comprises a broad repertoire of rice, wheat and meat dishes and the skilled use of various spices . Hyderabadi biryani and Hyderabadi haleem, with their blend of Mughlai and Arab cuisines, carry the national Geographical Indications tag . Hyderabadi cuisine is influenced to some extent by French, but more by Arabic, Turkish, Iranian and native Telugu and Marathwada cuisines . Popular native dishes include nihari, chakna, baghara baingan and the desserts qubani ka meetha, double ka meetha and kaddu ki kheer (a sweet porridge made with sweet gourd). </P> <P> One of Hyderabad's earliest newspapers, The Deccan Times, was established in the 1780s . In modern times, the major Telugu dailies published in Hyderabad are Eenadu, Andhra Jyothy, Sakshi and Namaste Telangana, while the major English papers are The Times of India, The Hindu, and The Deccan Chronicle . The major Urdu papers include The Siasat Daily, The Munsif Daily and Etemaad . Many coffee table magazines, professional magazines and research journals are also regularly published . The Secunderabad Cantonment Board established the first radio station in Hyderabad State around 1919 . Deccan Radio was the first radio public broadcast station in the city starting on 3 February 1935, with FM broadcasting beginning in 2000 . The available channels in Hyderabad include All India Radio, Radio Mirchi, Radio City, Red FM, Big FM and Fever FM . </P> <P> Television broadcasting in Hyderabad began in 1974 with the launch of Doordarshan, the Government of India's public service broadcaster, which transmits two free - to - air terrestrial television channels and one satellite channel . Private satellite channels started in July 1992 with the launch of Star TV . Satellite TV channels are accessible via cable subscription, direct - broadcast satellite services or internet - based television . Hyderabad's first dial - up internet access became available in the early 1990s and was limited to software development companies . The first public internet access service began in 1995, with the first private sector internet service provider (ISP) starting operations in 1998 . In 2015, high - speed public WiFi was introduced in parts of the city . </P> <P> Public and private schools in Hyderabad are governed by the Central Board of Secondary Education and follow a "10 + 2 + 3" plan . About two - thirds of pupils attend privately run institutions . Languages of instruction include English, Hindi, Telugu and Urdu . Depending on the institution, students are required to sit the Secondary School Certificate or the Indian Certificate of Secondary Education . After completing secondary education, students enroll in schools or junior colleges with a higher secondary facility . Admission to professional graduation colleges in Hyderabad, many of which are affiliated with either Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University Hyderabad (JNTUH) or Osmania University (OU), is through the Engineering Agricultural and Medical Common Entrance Test (EAM - CET). </P>

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