Persumably the reason light travels slower thru a solid is because it is interacting with the particles in the solid. i.e. the photon hits a particle, is absorbed (destroyed) but the energised particle then generates a new photon. So in a way a single photon cannot be slowed down.I did hear of an experiment which actually stopped light but think this worked on the same principle, you don't actually stop the photons but store their energy in another form until you are ready to realise them (As new photons). I don't think particles can travel faster than light but 'thought' experiments in quantum physics suggest that remote particles might be somehow be instantiously 'aware' of each other.