Yes, I do. It employs the same logic as R/S but it's used for trigonal centers, like a carbonyl.
What I don't really understand is how the faces of an unsymmetrically substituted ketone, such as 2-butanone, are interconverted by a σ plane. If you apply a mirror plane to 2-butanone, the image you get isn't superimposable on the first.
Besides, the book also says this: "The faces are diastereotopic in a structure such as either enantiomer of 3-chloro-2-butanone, because there are no symmetry elements that interconvert the faces."
Edit: Nevermind, I think I understand it now.