I just spent my lunch break reaquainting myself with how Rockwell does SFC.
It's odd, but it pretty much follows the rules of SFC.
But I don't understand what you are saying about the "prints".
The way AB does it, the "Action" boxes each have a subroutine of ladder. The outputs (coils) in that subroutine (usually real-world output, although internals) will be handled, epending on how that subroutine was "called" in the SFC (N(on-retentative),S(et),D(elay), etc). An action block can call multiple subroutines, with different.
The "Transition" boxes are also subroutine calls to straight ladder. Those subroutines should contain a single rung that has a EOT output. When the EOT goes True, the subroutine called by the Action box is no longer scanned (Again, the state of the outputswill be determined on how they were called).
When I generated a report, I saw only SFC or Ladder - no split pages. You are proably looking at some sore of roadmap to understanding how he set things up (I sounds like he allocated two words for each machines "State", and then assigned a bit for each state - N7:0/0=RM Auger E-Stop, N7:0/1=RM Auger Start, etc. Sounds like a reasonable approach.
I suggest, as a starting point, that you forget the printouts (and Powerpoint? Someone loaded a Powerpoint preentation into a PLC? That I've got to see!!), and open up the program (offline at first) with RSLogix. And download the PLC-5 Instruction Set manual from AB.com - there's an enire appendix devoted to SFCs.
If you have any specific questions, or if you can post what you are looking at, I'll try to help some more.