I only got a "D" in high school espanol, but it seems to me for "man-on-man", 
the Hispanic term traditionally is "Mano A Mano"...

"Mano Y Mano" I think means "man AND man", which may be what you meant if you 
were flying in Massachusetts... 

...not that there's anything *wrong* with flying there... ;-)

But I may be wrong too, the bathroom sign says something like llave sus 
manos, for 'wash your hands',  and maybe that was the original meaning... I'm 
washing my manos of it now;-)
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