Aspect Ratio Import Export settings?

Hi - I'm not terribly experienced in post, mostly a production kinda dude... so bare with me please...
I have a QT avi film file - 3ivx D4 4.0PR2, 640 x 272, Millions
MPEG Layer 3, Stereo, 44.100 kHz - FPS - 25
I did not create this so I can't answer any questions about software or settings used to create it beyond what you see above.
I'm trying to see if I can turn it into a DVD which will play on a normal DVD player. ( Mostly as an exercise to teach myself how...)
I drag and drop the file into my Assets window and am told in another small window that it's 720x480 NOT 640x272... If I drag it onto the time line I get a squished 4:3 image (vertically stretched)
If I double click on the file in the asset box it pops up in its correct format...
I've futzed around with the only two settings I've found that seem to have any bearing (Preferences, Simulator Aspect Ratio, 4:3 Letterbox - AND - Encoding , Aspect Ratio 16:9) - I've tried every combo without success.
My goal? To produce a DVD which will play letterboxed on a 4:3 TV and 16:9 or 1:85 on a HD TV... Worse case scenario for now I'd settle for the letterboxed version.
Can anyone help this moron here????
Also while you're at it... why does the size meter at the top of DVD Studio Pro show a much bigger size than the file I'm using? And why is there an addition audio track that is imported with a huge size????
HELP??????
JHF

Your best bet here is to get that file into a DVD legal size before you get it into DVDSP. I would also convert the audio as well - you need to use an uncompressed format at 48Khz, or convert it to Dolby Digital (AC3).
If you import these assets in to DVDSP it will do the best it can to convert them when the disc is built, but I wouldn't like to count on the resulting quality!
You could create a FCP project and import this asset in to that, setting it into the centre of the frame leaving black all around if you want to keep the original size/proportions. Export the result and encode that to MPEG2 using Compressor (or whatever your preferred MPEG encoder happens to be). Then import the resulting M2V file with the audio (which is now at 48Khz) into DVDSP. You should then be good to go.
The file size meter in DVDSP is showing you what the unencoded assets are, and the additional audio file is because MP3 is not a DVD format - it is creating this for you to use on your timeline... it's going to be uncompressed, and as you say, huge.

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    In Premiere, you can right click on your footage in the Project Bin.  From the context menu, choose Modify then Interpret Footage.  In that dialog box, you can tell it to conform the pixel aspect ratio to 16:9.

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