Karousi, a former Socialist voter, is reflected in a mirror next to her husband inside their home in...
EDITORIAL USE ONLY - NO COMMERCIAL OR BOOK SALES. Katerina Karousi, a 76-year old cancer patient and former Socialist voter, is reflected in a mirror next to her husband inside their home in Athens April 20, 2012. Earlier, Golden Dawn extreme right party members brought bags of food for her and her 79-year old husband, Andreas Karoussis. The couple live in an apartment badly damaged in a fire last year, unable to afford repairs on Karoussis' 729-euro per month pension. In 2009, Golden Dawn took just 0.23 percent of the vote, this time; polls show it taking between 4.1 and 5.7 percent. Much of that has come at the expense of the far-right LAOS party, whose ratings plummeted after it joined technocrat Prime Minister Lucas Papademos' pro-bailout coalition last year. The rise of Golden Dawn - which denies critics' labels as neo-Nazi - is all the more intriguing in a country proud of its World War II resistance against Nazi Germany and where anti-German sentiment still runs high over austerity measures demanded by Berlin and other lenders. Picture taken April 20, 2012. REUTERS/Yannis Behrakis (GREECE - Tags: POLITICS ELECTIONS)