It sounds like you want a four-channel amplifier (I don't think there are any) or more realistically a five-channel - unless two stereo power amps would be easier to place, considering the shorter speaker wires. I see Outlaw's 7075 costs only $699, plus postage of course, and would still give you 5 channels in your main room if you wanted to go to HT in the future, and it's rated at 75w per channel. As for speaker "power ratings", maybe someone else can tell me why this specification should not be called the most meaningless one in the audio business. Running any material that one is actually likely to listen to (which excludes pink noise) into the typical home speaker at a power level of even 25% of its so-called power rating would drive you out of the room, or at least it would me. The "power rating" would be meaningful if one were pea-brained enough to try to run a 100+ db sensitivity Lowther with a 100w amplifier, but presumably people who know about Lowthers and their relatives wouldn't be trying that in the first place.
The useful question would be, how big are your two listening rooms, what is the sensitivity of the speakers in each (measured in db output at a reference input power usually translating to 1 watt at the speaker's impedance), and how loud do you think you might sometimes want to listen, to what kind of material? Acid rock probably has the least dynamic range (from softest to loudest) and symphonic music the most.
For reference, 85 db is plenty loud and if you listen at sustained levels above 100 db the hearing aid people are going to love you in a few years.