Elmo and others,
If you're looking for a good scope that lets you see stuff, a small Dobsonian is probably your best bang for the buck. I have a 10" F-8 Dob that I built about 8 years ago, using a primary mirror and eliptical flat that I bought from Orion. The rest of the materials was mostly plywood and a 12" dia. sonotube. Build time was over a weekend; pretty straightforward. Plans are available for free on the net.
Someone asked what a "laser collimater" was. A collimater is an optical tool that you use to get your optics correctly aligned within the telescope. This lets the 'scope do its job at an optimal performance level. I have a simple optical collimater which works very well; I can't say how much advantage a laser setup would give you. Both the laser and optical versions are available from Orion and are highly recommended for anyone owning a dobsonian (or any Newtonian-design) telescope.
One other recommendation I would make for a *great* starter scope is the Edmond Astroscan. This is a 4.5" short focal length newtonian design that looks for all the world like its been shoved into a bowling ball. I bought my first on back in 1982 and its still going strong. This little guy is all but indestructable (I've tried.

) and the best "toss in the back seat and go" scope I've ever owned. You just plunk the tripod stand it comes with down on a flat surface, pull off the lens cover and start observing. All the optics are sealed and hard mounted, so it never needs alignment (see collimater, above). If you want a scope for casual observing while on a camping trip, its the first one I'd recommend.
