Outdoor Quest had mentioned the Brunton 8010G. That is an excellent compass, especially for the money. As I recall I chose that model to present to a group of Cub Scouts graduating to Boy Scouts. I think its about the equal of the Suunto Leader M-3 (which is what I latter chose to present to my own son's den when it graduated to Boy Scouts).
The Brunton doesn't require a screw driver to adjust the magnetic declination. That might be more convenient, but it also could get bumped out of adjustment, but not likely. I do worry about the screw head eventually getting damaged enough to not work, but it would seem that would take several lifetimes.
The only thing that frustrates me about the Brunton 8010G (and its minor) is that the mark where you read the angle could suffer from parallax problems since the bezel is raised off of the baseplate. That's probably not a big deal for most users.