Why won't my iMac boot? Just get the spinning wheel. Need suggestions

My iMac 4,1 (probably around 2006 vintage, 24" screen) won't boot.  I get a white screen with the Apple logo and a spinning wheel  I've let it sit for an hour and it never will move on to boot the system. I am running Snow Leopard (OS X 10.6.8) and can't upgrade further because of Intel Core Duo 32 bit processor.
To top it off, I thought that maybe putting the installation cdrom into the drive would have it boot to that drive and then I could run some diagnostics.  It won't boot to that either and now I don't know how to get the cdrom out.
This iMac it too old for Apple to repair.  Any suggestions?  I need it for a second system to run along side my MBP.
Thanks for your help.

The first iMac with a 24" screen was released in September 2006 and is a model 6,1. No model 4,1 was available with a 24" screen. The last Model 4,1 iMacs had a 20" screen and was released in January 2006. The maximum OS for it was Snow Leopard. It is considered Obsolete.
You need to reinstall Snow Leopard which can be done without erasing the drive (assuming the drive is OK.) You do need to boot from a Snow Leopard DVD. Can you get the installer DVD to mount on the Desktop? How did you try booting from the DVD? Did you do this:
Booting From An OS X Installer Disc
1. Insert OS X Installer Disc into the optical drive.
  2. Restart the computer.
  3. Immediately after the chime press and hold down the "C" key.
  4. Release the key when the spinning gear below the dark gray Apple
      logo appears.
  5. Wait for installer to finish loading.
Five ways to eject a stuck CD or DVD from the optical drive
Ejecting the stuck disc can usually be done in one of the following ways:
  1. Restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the
      left mouse button until the disc ejects.
  2. Press the Eject button on your keyboard.
  3. Click on the Eject button in the menubar.
  4. Press COMMAND-E.
  5. If none of the above work try this: Open the Terminal application in
      your Utilities folder. At the prompt enter or paste the following:
        /usr/bin/drutil eject
If this fails then try this:
Boot the computer into Single-user Mode. At the prompt enter the same command as used above. To restart the computer enter "reboot" at the prompt without quotes.

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