South Euclid Nonprofit Hosts Pasta Dinner Fundraiser to Support Neighborhood Revitalization
One South Euclid's "Eat for a Cause" pasta and meatball dinner on April 18 at 1370 Victory Drive raises adult tickets at $15 to fund neighborhood revitalization grants.

One South Euclid, the South Euclid Community Urban Redevelopment Corporation, is bringing its "Eat for a Cause" fundraiser to the South Euclid Community Center at 1370 Victory Drive on Saturday, April 18, with local chef Jim Frank preparing a community pasta and meatball dinner from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m.
Adult tickets are priced at approximately $15, with a reduced rate for children and free admission for the youngest attendees. The dinner is structured for both dine-in and takeout, lowering the barrier for families who want to contribute without committing to a sit-down meal.
The fundraiser extends beyond the community center walls. On the same date, partner promotions at Chipotle and Panda Express will funnel additional dollars back to One South Euclid, broadening the fundraising footprint without requiring extra organizing infrastructure.
Proceeds go directly toward One South Euclid's core programs: neighborhood grants, home and small-business revitalization, and services targeted at seniors and homeowners across the South Euclid area. For a nonprofit operating at the neighborhood scale, a pasta dinner hits a practical sweet spot: low food cost per head, universal appeal, and a format that scales from 50 to 500 without a dramatic production lift.
Chef Jim Frank's involvement also puts a local face on what can otherwise feel like a transactional fundraising ticket. Community catering at this level, batch cooking a pasta and meatball program for a two-hour service window across dine-in and takeout simultaneously, is a genuine logistical exercise, and Frank's presence signals that One South Euclid is treating the dinner as an event worth attending, not just a check to write.
Tickets are available through One South Euclid's Zeffy ticketing page. The April 18 window is tight, and with parallel restaurant promotions and a dine-in crowd all converging on Victory Drive, organizers are counting on the dinner to double as both a revenue driver and a visible marker of the neighborhood network One South Euclid is actively building.
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