In reply to Underpowered :
Not a ton of tricks on setup, but maybe some of this will be useful.
I never ran a rear bar on mine because it made 1 wheel peel problems terrible, but P71/crown vic bars can be adapted pretty easily if you want to try it.
Get a 9C1 steering box, it is much faster ratio and is valved differently so you actually have steering feel. Transforms the maneuverability of the car and can be found in junkyards pretty cheap. Read up on the steering box adjustments too, there are 2 adjustments that need to be pretty dialed in to get rid of steering box play. Makes a huge difference, and even remanufactured steering boxes tend to be set up incorrectly. Replacing the rag joint with a U joint (Flaming River or a Jeep, I think a ZJ grand cherokee? column fits) also helps a lot, but only if yours is trashed like mine was. This was the single most "modernizing" feeling thing I remember doing.
Poly front sway bar link bushings help - the pogo joints deflect a lot and you lose a lot of roll stiffness. Replacing the front upper shock bushings with poly also helps a lot - the shocks react much more quickly and positively. It's amazing how much the normal rubber ones move before the shock actually starts to work. Energy suspension makes all this stuff and it is pretty cheap.
The stock suspension was fun in a terrifying way at an autocross, but it's unbelievably soft.
Stiffer springs are as close as the Moog parts interchange. I think I ran Moog 80098 front springs and CC603 rear springs, and I can't remember if I had to trim the fronts to dial in the ride height. Stiffer springs will mean you need to get good shocks, though. I ran Hotchkis single adjustable Fox shocks for an impala SS on mine all the way around. The rears were great, the fronts still needed more low speed damping. Something from a Chevy Express 2500 was the next thing I think I was going to try but it was never quite bad enough for me to get to it.
If you are near southern Indiana (Columbus) I have a set of what I think are Moog 5662 springs you can have if you want them.
Get some ZQ8 S10 front bump stops for the front. The factory hard rubber triangles are springy enough that they kind of boing the suspension back up through rebound after they contact, where the foam ZQ8 (or rear GMT800 SUV rear stops if you end up really low) seem to be more progressive and self-damping so the suspension stays more settled after a big compression.
In reply to L5wolvesf :
There must be two CSCCs - this was Columbus Sports Car Club in southern Indiana.