"Student-Loan Issues Under Stress" says Wall Street Journal. This piece erroneously implies that money market funds are associated with auction-rate securities, saying, "Wall Street's financial-engineering machine bundles together long-term student loans and uses them as collateral for short-term investments owned by money-market investors." Money market funds cannot invest in ARS, which have seen a number of failed auctions recently, because of their lack of a hard "put". (ARS are short-term investments, not "money market" securities.) See also WSJ's "Standard Chartered's SIV Plan Collapses".