Since everyone's got a better idea, here's mine. I've been buying Nikon FGs lately. They always go cheap, and they are great cameras. It started when I wanted a film body to use with my Nikon lenses (about four years ago I dumped all my Leica stuff and bought a Nikon D300). Since I've bought mainly a lot of old manual prime lenses, I'm all set on that count. I didn't want one of the big pro models because they're just too big and heavy for me to enjoy. The FG is about the size of the old Olympus OM1 stuff I used to have, and it's so cheap that instead of getting them fixed if they break, I'll just throw them away and get another. I also have an FM (too big, and no handgrip makes it hard to hold) an F90 (MUCH too big, too heavy, plastic, and has a noisy motor that I certainly don't need) and an FA (nice camera, but, again, bigger and heavier than I need), but the FGs have become my faves. Basically, they do everything a camera really needs to do.
The 50mm series E lens they came with originally is Nikon's usual glass, but in a cheaper mount (before cheap meant all plastic, as it does now, so it's not that bad). It's actually a decent lens. FGs have an easy-to-use manual mode, aperture priority, and a simple program mode. Basically, that's plenty. An FG and lens is easy to find under $100 on
Ebay. Unlike with Canon, virtually every lens that Nikon has made since around 1970 will work on both my D300 and all my film cameras. Not so Canon, and the reason I did NOT buy a Canon digital is their nasty habit of changing their lens mount to something incompatible every few years, rendering all old lenses useless. That was the single deciding reason why I went with Nikon.