Not going to insult your intelligence here, but only providing extra info for those who may not know about the G-body quad headlamp affairs.
If you got the rectangular 4 x 6, the three prong is technically a low beam/high beam, aka 4652, or GM p/n 5966200 from the factory. But they usually just call them low beams, notated as "2A" on the bulb. High beams are notated as a 1A on the bulb (non-halogen were 4651, or GM p/n 5966201, halogens were H4651, or GM p/n 5930567).
"Low beams" are three prongs. Tan wire to low beam, green wire to high beam which jumpers over to the high beam bulb, and a black ground. G-cars are set up that the low beams go off during the high beam operation, but get power through the high beam circuit, thus all 4 are headlights light up. They do this because they have a spare lamp circuit that comes on (green wire) when the bright lights are on. The high beam selector switch in the column takes power away from the tan wire (low beam only) and provides power through the green wire to the spare element in the low beam bulb and the high beam at the same time. There are other cars that have the low beams go off when the high beams are on. (I believe the 87/88 is like this, but I can't recall) So in reality, there's 2 elements in the low beam bulb, the low circuit and high circuit. This is why sometimes when only ONE element goes out on a low-beam bulb, it can light up in the other mode. It can mess with your head if you don't know about that 2nd low beam circuit.