I did it on the Pacer this summer, so different radiator but I used a set of stock Subaru fans that fit it. There are several brands of slim electric fans. With electric fans a good shroud is really important.
You can use a threaded opening in the aluminum intake manifold, and there are also at least two threaded ports into the water jacket on the driver's side that fit most US threaded temp sensors. The economy method is two temp sensors, stock engines use a 205-215 for the low and a 225-240 for the high. Remember, you don't want it fighting the thermostat which is trying to keep your engine around 195. Use a relay to trigger the fan so you don't burn out the sensor and run the trigger off a wire that is hot at run only, not at start or acc. Run the power straight from the distribution point on the starting solenoid, fusing both separately.
Adjustable ones are better, especially if you have a through-the-radiator mounting. I put one in the intake that is set around 210 (Max for the adjustment) and one in the radiator near the inlet that was adjusted on the road to just come on after idling for about 10 minutes on a very hot day. I've never had a problem cooling all summer.
There are some nice Tarus-specific controllers available, and some gradual controllers for single-speed fans. Pick controls to match the fan you want. Some will stay on for a pre-determined amount of time after your car is shut off too. You also need to address A/C, with some diodes or relays off the clutch feed to bring the fans on.
They should draw less power while moving, or shut off completely and they should move as much or more air at idle. You probably won't notice power improvements at normal speeds and loads. Theoretically, your A/C should run cooler and your car warm up faster. Electric fans are most beneficial at high RPMs and on cold days.