For a street car, the solid bushings on the rear control arms will cause problems, especially on the top rear arms.. You might be able to get by with them on the bottoms if you reinforce the mounting brackets with boiler plate. The mounting holes should be checked periodically for elongation and stress cracks. When going over bumps, and taking turns, the rear control arm bushings are subject to a combination of angular twist and rotational movements - motions that cause binding and other problems when solid bushings are used. A good quality spherical bearing setup, or Del-alum type bushing would work better for a street driven car.
If you still have your heart set on solid control arm bushings, I believe that Competition Engineering still makes them in anodized aluminum for our cars rear control arms. They might still be available from Jegs or Summit for about $60 or so per set of 4 to fit our cars. I have them on a set of GM G body control arms for a tractor pull application that only goes in a straight line. They work great for that.
I'll look up the part # for them if you can't find them, and still want them.
Billy
Montgomery Village, MD