Electron micrographs of five different DNA bacteriophages, as prepared by drying in thin films of negative stain, frequently show their heads to be disrupted and flattened. In such cases DNA strands, no larger than 2.5 nm in diameter, become visible, either contained within partially ruptured capsids or completely ejected from severely ruptured ones. Seen in either aspect, the strands appear with circular outline; in some cases a set of concentric circles (or a tightly wound spiral) is evident. Two alternative models of DNA packing within phage heads are proposed. Both are consistent with the electron microscopic observations and, as applied specifically to T4 phage heads, they are also consistent with available data from birefringence studies. One model proposes that the DNA, in simple double-helix form, is wound into a ball. The other suggests that the DNA is wound like a spool, with a greater number of turns in the central region than at the two ends and with the spool axis perpendicular to the axis of the phage particle. The available evidence does not permit a choice to be made between the two models.