The photodissociation of oxazole (c-C3H3NO) following excitation at 193 nm is studied using mm-Wave rotational spectroscopy in a uniform supersonic flow. Molecules entrained in the flow are excited to a ππ* state after which it is believed most relax back to the ground state via ring opening at the O-C[N] bond with subsequent fragmentation. From the line intensities of the probed products, we obtained the branching fractions for seven different products which are the result of five different dissociation pathways. The detected photoproducts and respective branching fractions (%) are the following: HCN (70.4), HCO (22.8), CH2CN (4.2), CH2CO (1.0), CH3CN (1.0), HNC (0.9), HNCO (0.08). We suspect much of the HCO may be formed in conjunction with the isocyanomethyl radical, CH2NC, which we did not probe. We discuss our results in relation to previous work, in particular our own study on the related isomer isoxazole, as well as direct dynamics theoretical simulations from the literature. We also studied the relaxation of a number of vibrationally excited levels of HCN produced at 20 K.