A bill has been approved in the House and Senate, albeit in slightly different versions. The bill now goes to

the president for her/his veto or signature.
a conference committee.
the standing committees in the House and Senate where the bill originated.
the House Rules committee.
the Senate Rules committee.
IS A CORRECT ANSWER?THANK YOU:))))))

Not A -- until the House and Senate agree.

http://www.ehow.com/search.aspx?s=how+a+bill+becomes+a+law&Options=0&x=0&y=0

Read carefully.

The House Rules Committee.

Here you go! The correct answer is:

B. a conference committee.

The correct answer is a conference committee. After a bill has been approved in both the House and Senate, but in slightly different versions, it goes to a conference committee. This committee is made up of members from both the House and Senate, who work together to reconcile the differences between the two versions of the bill. They negotiate and come to a compromise, creating a conference report that includes the agreed-upon final version of the bill. This report is then sent back to both chambers for a final vote before it goes to the president for their veto or signature.