36-bit was a common enough word length. Not just UNIVAC, but IBM 360, PDP-6/PDP-10, and some others. Convenient both for octal (multiple of 3 bits) and working with pre-ASCII, 6-bit character encodings (multiple of 6 bits).
Which is why we have UTF-9 and UTF-18, as defined in RFC 4042.
Which is why we have UTF-9 and UTF-18, as defined in RFC 4042.
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc4042
(Spoiler: It's an April Fool's joke.)