Drop by and grab a sandwich or some coffee before heading off to class. 

Cappy's Cafe

295-seat large auditorium with fixed tablet-arm seating, cinema-grade AV, and special-event camera/microphone systems.

Capacity: 295 student seats + 1 presenter seat, 8 wheelchair positions

Room Style: Classroom, Sloped Floor

120-seat large, tiered lecture hall with continuous writing surfaces, teaching console, 2-screen HD projection & microphones.

Capacity: 120 student seats + 1 presenter seat, 4 wheelchair positions

Room Style: Classroom, Stepped Floor

KUT 90.5, established in 1958, and KUTX 98.9, established in 2013, are licensed by the Federal Communications Commission to the University of Texas at Austin and operate as a department within the Moody College of Communication. Both stations strive to be leading sources for knowledge and ideas that enrich and sustain greater Austin’s unique sense of place, cultural identity, and position as a center of leadership. Each month, nearly 500,000 Central Texans listen to KUT and KUTX on the air and online.

Glass-fronted multipurpose room with movable tables and chairs, teaching console, KUT AV feeds & HD projection.

Capacity: 19 attendee seats + 1 presenter seat, unconstrained wheelchair seating

Room Style: Conference Room, Flat Floor

Moody College welcomes new leadership for its top programs in advertising and public relations

Moody College of Communication conducted a national search to find an individual to guide and lead its top ranked programs in advertising and public relations. After extensive interviews, consultations, discussions and reviews, Dr. Natalie Tindall was selected, and she began as school director and professor on Aug. 15.

She previously served as the chair of the Department of Communication and Media at Lamar University. A tenured professor and administrator, Tindall was previously graduate director for multiple doctoral and master’s areas at Georgia State University.

A 'distributed mosaic' of sound

The brain is the maestro behind our every movement and thought, and the guide that tells us what we feel and what we know.

Most recently, the brain is telling us we still have a lot to learn.

In fact, a multi-year study produced by neuroscientist Dr. Liberty Hamilton and colleagues at UCSF and McGill University indicates that how the brain actually turns sounds into words may not happen in the way that scientists had always assumed.

Subscribe to